UNITED PHOSPHORUS, LTD., an Indian corporation; Shroff's United Chemicals, Ltd., an Indian corporation; and J.C. Miller & Associates, Incorporated, an Illinois corporation, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
ANGUS CHEMICAL COMPANY, a Delaware corporation; Angus Chemie GmbH, a German corporation; the Estate of Freeman Hughes through its representative Yvonne Hughes; Ollie W. Chandler; Lowell Pals; Gary W. Granzow; D.B. Gupta; and Lupin Laboratories, Ltd., an Indian corporation, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 01-1693.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued April 4, 2002.
Reargued En Banc November 6, 2002.
Decided March 10, 2003*.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Peter M. Katsaros, Baum, Sigman, Auerbach, Pierson & Neuman, Chicago, IL, Frederick S. Rhine (Argued), Gessler Hughes Socol Piers Resnick & Dym, Chicago, IL, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Stephen M. Shapiro, T. Mark McLaughlin (Argued), Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw, Chicago, IL, Barrie L. Brejcha, Baker & McKenzie, Chicago, IL, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before POSNER, COFFEY, EASTERBROOK, RIPPLE, MANION, KANNE, ROVNER, DIANE P. WOOD, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge.
Today, for the first time in this court, we encounter the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act, 15 U.S.C. § 6a (FTAIA), a 1982 amendment to the Sherman Act, which affects its reach in foreign commerce. The primary issue involves whether the relevant provision of FTAIA is jurisdictional or whether it states an additional element of a Sherman Act claim. This in turn affects how a court deals with it and, in this case, what the outcome will be.
Plaintiffs United Phosphorus and Shroff's United Chemicals are chemical manufacturers based in India. J.C. Miller & Associates is an American firm, which was involved in a joint venture with the Indian plaintiffs. The defendants are Angus Chemical and its officers, Angus Chemie GmbH, and Lupin Laboratories — American companies or subsidiaries of American companies, which we will refer to collectively as Angus. The complaint alleges that Angus attempted to monopolize, did monopolize, and conspired to monopolize the market for certain chemicals, in violation of § 2 of the Sherman Act.
The issue of the court's subject matter jurisdiction was first raised soon after the case was filed in 1994. Angus' Rule 12(b)(1) motion was denied. Then, after considerable discovery (24 depositions and 8,000 pages of exhibits), Angus filed renewed motions to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and for summary judgment in 2000. Angus contended that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction under FTAIA, which, as relevant here, limits application of the Sherman Act to conduct with a "direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect" on domestic commerce. After a thorough analysis of the facts, Magistrate Judge Ian H. Levin, sitting by consent, agreed with Angus and granted its motion to dismiss. United Phosphorus, Ltd. v. Angus Chem. Co.,
Briefly, to the facts. In their original 1994 complaint, the plaintiffs alleged that India had the "greatest incidence of tuberculosis in the world." That allegation is consistent with a report from the Centers for Disease Control, dated March 22, 2002, which says that every year approximately 2 million people in India develop tuberculosis, accounting for 25 percent of the world's new cases. The parties tell us that "Ethambutol" is a primary pharmaceutical for the treatment of the disease. The chemicals involved in its productiоn are the subject of this lawsuit.
2-Amino-1 Butanol (AB)is the key ingredient of Ethambutol, and 1-Nitro-Propane (1-NP) is the raw material from which AB is made. To make Ethambutol, defendant Lupin uses AB, which it buys from defendant Chemie, currently the world's only manufacturer of AB. Chemie is a German subsidiary, wholly owned by defendant Angus. The AB is manufactured in Germany. Angus manufactures 1-NP at a plant in Louisiana and is the world's only manufacturer of 1-NP.
This lawsuit stems from prior trade-secret litigation involving several of the parties. In the early 1990's, the Indian plaintiffs decided to acquire the technology for making AB and 1-NP. They went to Dr. John Miller (owner of J.C. Miller & Associates), who also had been the vice-president of research and development at Angus and supervised Angus' efforts to improve its AB processes. When Angus learned what was going on, it sued Miller and the Indian entities (who are the plaintiffs here) in an Illinois state court, seeking to enjoin Miller from misappropriating its trade secrets. Two years later, when Angus was faced with a discovery order which would have required it to disclose the details of the technology, Angus voluntarily dismissed the lawsuit.
The defendants in that case then filed this suit. As plaintiffs here, they claim that but for the Illinois action they would have sold AB for profit. They accuse Angus et al. of using anticompetitive means — the lawsuit — to thwart their plans.
As we said, the case was dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under FTAIA, which amends the Sherman Act, stating:
This Act shall not apply to сonduct involving trade or commerce (other than import trade or import commerce) with foreign nations unless —
(1) such conduct has a direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect —
(A) on trade or commerce which is not trade or commerce with foreign nations, or on import trade or import commerce with foreign nations; or
(B) on export trade or export commerce with foreign nations, of a person engaged in such trade or commerce in the United States; and
(2) such effect gives rise to a claim under the provisions of this Act other than this section.
If this Act applies to such conduct only because of the operation of paragraph (1)(B), then this Act shall apply to such conduct only for injury to export business in the United States.
What is relevant here is that the conduct must have "a direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect" on trade or commerce within the United States, rather than just on foreign commerce.
If the requirement for a substantial effect on commerce in the United States goes to the court's subject matter jurisdiction, the case is analyzed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), which provides for dismissal of an action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Subject matter jurisdiction is, as we know, an issue that should be resolved early but must be considered at any stage of the litigatiоn. If subject matter jurisdiction is not evident on the face of the complaint, the motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) would be analyzed as any other motion to dismiss, by assuming for purposes of the motion that the allegations in the complaint are true. However, as here, if the complaint is formally sufficient but the contention is that there is in fact no subject matter jurisdiction, the movant may use affidavits and other material to support the motion. The burden of proof on a 12(b)(1) issue is on the party asserting jurisdiction. Mortensen v. First Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n,
On the other hand, if the requirement for a substantial effect on U.S. commerce is an element of the claim, then the motion would be properly treated under Rule 56 summary judgment standards. Summary judgment on the merits can be granted if, construing the facts against the moving party, there is no genuine issue of material fact and that party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In short, at this stage of the litigation — that is, when the court is considering a motion — the analysis differs if the issue is one of jurisdiction or an issue on the merits. We think it is fair to say that in this case the procedure employed will dictate the result. The appellants have made little effort to demonstrate that the district court's findings of fact are clearly erroneous. They claim, however, that what we have here should be viewed as a motion for summary judgment on the merits. Under the summary judgment standard with the facts construed in their favor, they contend that the defendants' motion should have been denied. The defendants, of course, contend that they should win under either standard, a proposition on which we need pass no judgment.
Over the years, the difficult issue of limiting the extraterritorial reach of the United States laws in international trade and international relations has received a good deal of attention. Despite the fact that, using language borrowed from the Foreign Commerce Clause of the Constitution, the Sherman Act itself prohibits agreements restraining "trade or commerce... with foreign nations," there has long been concern about overreaching under our antitrust laws. As far back as American Banana Co. v. United Fruit Co.,
Then FTAIA was enacted in 1982. There is some debate over the extent to which the Act simply codifies the "general understanding of when American antitrust law should be concerned about restraints abroad...." See 1A Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law, ¶ 272 (2d ed.2000). In Hartford Fire Insurance v. California,
It is in Hartford, however, that Justice Scalia, in dissent, sets out the view that FTAIA does not go to subject matter jurisdiction at all. He perceived two distinct questions: whether the district court had jurisdiction, and whether the Sherman Act reaches the extraterritorial conduct alleged. His conclusion was that the district court had subject-mаtter jurisdiction, simply because the Sherman Act claim was not frivolous and 28 U.S.C. § 1331 gives the district court jurisdiction over cases "arising under" federal statutes. The second question, he said, "has nothing to do with the jurisdiction of the courts. It is a question of substantive law turning on regulatory power over the challenged conduct." At 813,
The majority in Hartford carries out the debate with Justice Scalia in footnotes. As to Justice Scalia's contention that what is involved in the case is prescriptive, as opposed to subject-matter jurisdiction, Justice Souter says that the parties "for good reason" do not question prescriptive jurisdiction. He then quotes cоmmentators who say that the Sherman Act is a "prime exampl[e] of the simultaneous exercise of prescriptive jurisdiction and grant of subject matter jurisdiction." At 796 n. 22,
One could argue that in Hartford it is not entirely clear what the phrase "Sherman Act jurisdiction" means. After all, "Jurisdiction is a word of many, too many, meanings." United States v. Vanness,
That reading receives some support in domestic Sherman Act cases, which do not implicate FTAIA, but may shed some light by analogy. McLain v. Real Estate Board of New Orleans, Inc.,
To establish the jurisdictional element of a Sherman Act violation it would be sufficient for petitioners to demonstrate a substantial effect on interstate commerce generated by respondents' brokerage activity.
At 242,
More recently, in Summit Health, Ltd. v. Pinhas,
whether the interstate commerce requirement of antitrust jurisdiction is satisfied by allegations that petitioners conspired to exclude respondent, a duly licensed and practicing physician and surgeon, from the market for ophthalmological services in Los Angeles because he refused to follow an unnecessarily costly surgical procedure. [Emphasis added.]
The Court again had trouble agreeing on the precise answer to that question, as its 5-4 split shows, but said that the conspiracy at issue "has a sufficient nexus with interstate commerce to support federal jurisdiction." At 333,
The Sherman Act and its FTAIA amendments are not the only statutes which present the dilemma regarding whether a statutory requirement is an element of a claim or a matter of subject-matter jurisdiction. In Gwaltney v. Chesapeake Bay Foundation,
Turning back to FTAIA, we note that commentators tend to discuss FTAIA in terms of jurisdiction. See, e.g., P. Areeda & H. Hovenkamp, ¶ 273; Herbert Hovenkamp, Federal Antitrust Policy, § 21.2 (2d ed.). Referring directly to subject-matter jurisdiction, the ABA Section of Antitrust Law, Antitrust Law Developments (5th ed.2002), at 1121, states that "to establish subject matter jurisdiction under the FTAIA, a plaintiff must also show that `such effect' — i.e., the direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable anticompetitive domestic effect — `gives rise to' a Sherman Act claim." In addition, the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission both consider the statute jurisdictional. Regarding jurisdiction over conduct involving foreign commerce, the guidelines for the agencies state "[T]he jurisdictional limits of the Sherman Act and the FTC Act are delineated in the FTAIA." Antitrust, Unfairness, Deception Policies and Guidelines, reprinted in
As we have said, this is our first foray into FTAIA. We have, however, considered the reach of the Sherman Act into foreign commerce prior to the enactment of FTAIA. In In re Uranium Antitrust Litigation,
We view the jurisdictional issue as two-pronged: (1) does subject matter jurisdiction exist; and (2) if so, should it be exercised?
However, we also determined in United States v. Martin,
We see the purity of an argument that 28 U.S.C. § 1331 provides federal question jurisdiction for cases "arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States" so that without more, the federal courts have jurisdiction over Sherman Act claims. It would follow, then, that any requirement for an effect on interstate commerce must be an element of the claim. We know, however, that nothing is quite that simple. For instance, a frivolous suit which charges a violation of a federal statute "arises under" federal law. Yet, because the suit is frivolous, subject matter jurisdiction over it is lacking. Bell v. Hood,
But with reference to FTAIA, the argument that the statute sets out an element of the claim or a basis for legislative jurisdiction has not gained approval. Even after the decision in Steel Company, the EPCRA case decided in 1998, courts of appeals continue to treat FTAIA as jurisdictional. Whatever their differences in interpretation of the Act or the effect it has on prior judge-made law, all have treated the issue as one of subject matter jurisdiction. See Kruman (review of the district court's dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under FTAIA); Den Norske Stats Oljeselskap As v. HeereMac V.o.f.,
In Hartford, as well, it is not likely that references to jurisdiction are really references to legislative, rather than subject-matter, jurisdiction. Justice Souter made it clear that he disagreed with Justice Scalia's contention that under FTAIA what is at issue is legislative jurisdiction. To reiterate, he said:
JUSTICE SCALIA believes that what is at issue in this litigation is prescriptive, as opposed to subject-matter, jurisdiction.... The parties do not question prescriptive jurisdiction, however, and for good reason: it is well established that Congress has exercised such jurisdiction under the Sherman Act. See G. Born & D. Westin, International Civil Litigation in United States Courts 542, n. 5 (2d ed. 1992) (Sherman Act is a "prime exampl[e] of the simultaneous exercise of prescriptive jurisdiction and grant of subject matter jurisdiction").
So, while it might seem desirable to have no messy extra jurisdictional requirements under some acts of Congress, but not others, that is not how our system necessarily works. There is no question that Congress has the power to limit the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Lauf v. E.G. Shinner & Co.,
As we have said, the legislative history shows that jurisdiction stripping is what Congress had in mind in enacting FTAIA. The statute was enacted against a backdrop of almost 60 years of precedent which characterized the application of the Sherman Act to the conduct of foreign markets as a matter of subject matter jurisdiction. We must presume that Congress expects statutes to be read to conform with Supreme Court precedent. Porter v. Nussle,
There are good policy reasons for the prevailing approach. The extraterritorial scope of our antitrust laws touches our relations with foreign governments, and so, it seems, it is prudent to tread softly in this area. If FTAIA sets out an issue on the merits, resolution of the issue could be delayed until late in the case, and the potential for a lawsuit to have an effect on foreign markets would exist while the case remained pending. In contrast, if this important issue goes to subject matter jurisdiction, it can be resolved early in the litigation. If missed early on, it can be resolved whenever it becomes clear that the alleged anticompetitive activity does not have a substantial effect on United States commerce. If the parties do not raise the issue, a judge has an obligation to raise it. Treating the matter as one of subject matter jurisdiction reduces the potential for offending the economic policies of other nations. In short, FTAIA limits the power of the United States courts (and private plaintiffs) from nosing about where they do not belong. And the power of the courts is precisely what subject matter jurisdiction is about. For all of these reasons, we find that the district court properly treated the issue as one of subject matter jurisdiction.
That being the case, we must determine whether the court's findings of fact are clearly erroneous. In its analysis, the court examined thousands of pages of evidentiary materials which formed the basis for its findings of fact. The court found that there was virtually no evidence that the plaintiffs would have made any sales in the United States. They set out to produce a tuberculosis drug for India. Experts say that the main application for AB is to produce Ethambutol, which is primarily used in India. The Lederle division of American Home Products was at the relevant time the only company in the world that had FDA approval to sell Ethambutol in the United States. Lederle imported Ethambutol into the United States from Italy using a product that it buys in India. In fact, it appears that the very small amount of AB sold in the United States was used as an ingredient in a product for making rocket motors, not drugs. 3M used a very small amount for this purpose, purchasing less than 0.4 percent of the world's AB production — or $25,000 in total volume. But 3M never conducted formal bidding for this small purchase and shows no signs of changing its supplier.
Other than saying that "there is ample evidence to support plaintiffs' allegations," plaintiffs do not tell us how the court's findings are clearly erroneous. True, the plaintiffs outline the evidence reflecting their plans to manufacture the products for sale in the United States. And, in fact, it may be that there was evidence to support that position. But the district court is allowed on this motion to weigh the facts, and when it did, it found that plaintiffs
had no actual plans to sell AB in this country and that there would have been no significant AB sales opportunities for Plaintiffs in this country even if they had tried to sell AB here. For instance, Miller testified that he "had no conversation with any potential customers for AB in the United States." Miller Dep. 413. Moreover, Shroff testified that he and his "marketing man" spoke with ten to twelve potential AB customers, all of which were located in India. Shroff Dep. 144-45, 161-62.
At 1012. Plaintiffs' own liability expert testified that AB sales in the United States would be "less than substantial." Similar findings were made regarding the other chemicals involved. The plaintiffs do not point out how these findings were clearly erroneous, and our review leads us to conclude that they were not. With the dismissal of the federal claims, the dismissal of pendent state-law claims was also proper. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge, dissenting, with whom Circuit Judges EASTERBROOK, MANION, and ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER join.
In straightforward language, the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act of 1982 (FTAIA), 15 U.S.C. § 6a, says that the Sherman Act "shall not apply" to conduct involving foreign trade or commerce unless that conduct has a "direct, substantial and reasonably foreseeable effect" on either U.S. domestic commerce, U.S. import commerce, or (for U.S. exporters only) on U.S. export commerce. The question before us today, which not only reaches this court as an issue of first impression, but which has also never been analyzed thoroughly by any other court, is whether these criteria for the statute's "applicability" strip federal district courts of their acknowledged subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1337 over cases that do not meet the test, or if instead they describe an element of the plaintiff's claim. The majority has opted for the former approach, largely because the word "jurisdiction" appears in many prior decisions of lower courts and in certain materials published by the government's antitrust enforcement agencies and the American Bar Association. But neither the majority nor those earlier opinions have distinguished carefully between judicial and legislative jurisdiction — or, to put it differently, between jurisdiction to decide a case and jurisdiction to prescribe a rule of law. The central question now before us is whether the FTAIA affects the former or the latter power. Given the fact that "jurisdiction is a word of many, too many, meanings," ante at 947-48, quoting United States v. Vanness,
In my view, there are at least four compelling reasons why we should not construe the FTAIA's test as one going to the subject matter jurisdiction of the court, and instead should adopt what I will call an "element" approach: first, the language of the statute supports the position that this is an element of the claim, especially when it is contrasted to true jurisdiction-stripping statutes; second, the "subject matter jurisdiction" characterization is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decision in Steel Co. and with the law of this court; third, the procedural consequences of a "subject matter jurisdiction" reading would have perverse effects, measured against the policies the FTAIA and the federal antitrust laws were designed to further; and finally, to call this "subject matter jurisdiction" fails to take into account the long history of the application of the U.S. antitrust laws to foreign conduct.
* Although the majority has set forth the relevant language of the FTAIA, it bears repeating here, both for ease of reference and for emphasis. It reads as follows (and there is equivalent language covering section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act):
Sections 1 to 7 of this title [Sherman Act] shall not apply to conduct involving trade or commerce (other than import trade or import commerce) with foreign nations unless —
(1) such conduct has a direct, substantial and reasonably foreseeable effect —
A) on trade or commerce which is not trade or commerce with foreign nations, or on import trade or import commerce with foreign nations; or
B) on export trade or export commerce with foreign nations, of a person engaged in such trade or in commerce in the United States; and
(2) such effect gives rise to a claim under the provisions of sections 1 to 7 of this title, other than this section.
15 U.S.C. § 6a.
One will search in vain in this brief passage for any hint that the Congress was attempting to strip federal courts of their competence to hear and decide antitrust cases with a foreign element. In my view, that alone should be enough to tip the balance toward the "element" characterization. To begin with, while one can find examples in Supreme Court decisions of the Court's treatment of statutes with jurisdictional language as non-jurisdictional (e.g., Steel Co., discussed below; Hughes Aircraft Co. v. United States ex rel. Schumer,
II
The fact that the FTAIA does not contain a clear congressional statement that it is intended to restrict the subject matter jurisdiction of the federal courts (or for that matter even a brief mention of the term "jurisdiction") should be enough to resolve the question before us. If more is needed, then we must consider further how to determine whether a particular law affects the competence of a federal court to entertain the case at all, or if it simply outlines the scope of the statute and permits the court to issue a decision on the merits either upholding or rejecting a claim. Our starting point should be the Supreme Court's decision in Steel Co., supra,
It is worth noting that the extraterritorial reach of statutes varies widely. Some statutes, such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, have been interpreted by the Supreme Court as having no application at all beyond U.S. borders, even if both the employer and the employee are U.S. citizens. See EEOC v. Arabian American Oil Co.,
That is what Congress did in the FTAIA: it established the "direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable" effect on commerce test as an element of the plaintiff's claim. It did not disempower the federal courts from ruling on the merits for a defendant when the plaintiff is unable to make the requisite showing. The majority's suggestion that the Supreme Court held otherwise in Hartford Fire Ins. v. California,
This court has had occasion to consider the question whether effect-on-commerce elements analogous to those in the FTAIA affect subject matter jurisdiction or the statement of a claim, and we have concluded that they do not. See United States v. Martin,
III
Yet another reason why the majority's rule is ill-advised comes from the nature of jurisdictional rules and the consequences of treating something as affecting the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. Rules about subject matter jurisdiction define the allocation of business between the federal and the state courts. The federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Only if Article III of the Constitution confers power on them to hear the particular kind of case or controversy at issue, and if a statute of Congress has implemented that constitutional grant of power, can a case be heard in federal court.
The first point here is that a recognized issue of subject matter jurisdiction must be resolved before any other action is taken on the case. There is an important institutional interest in resolving jurisdictional questions quickly and simply. Congress recognized this in one of its classic jurisdiction-stripping rules: federal appellate courts have no jurisdiction to review district court decisions remanding cases to state court when the district court relies on a reason outlined in 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). See 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d). Inquiries into whether a case "arises under" federal law, for purposes of § 1331 jurisdiction, can normally be completed by a review of the complaint. Inquiries into diversity jurisdiction are often just as straightforward, even though fact-finding might be necessary in the occasional case in which it is unclear where a person is domiciled, or what amount is in controversy, or which of several corporate facilities should count as the corporation's principal place of business.
The jurisdictional inquiries just described are well-defined and do not normally consume enormous judicial resources. In contrast, an inquiry into whether a particular course of conduct has a "direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect" on either the domestic commerce of the United States or its import commerce threatens to become a preliminary trial on the merits. Indeed, the record in one famous international antitrust case, Timberlane Lumber Co. v. Bank of America, N.T. & S.A., should give advocates of the "subject matter jurisdiction" approach serious pause. That case was originally filed in the district court in 1973. In 1974, the district court dismissed for want of "subject matter jurisdiction." The Ninth Circuit reversed in 1976. See
The element approach, in contrast, has none of those defects. In some instances, it will be possible to resolve the FTAIA issue on the pleadings or on summary judgment, and appellate review from either kind of deсision de novo. If the issue is not capable of resolution on summary judgment, that should be a red flag in any event. Effect on commerce issues will often be closely intertwined with the merits. Yet if the case reaches the merits, there is no reason why the court cannot resolve the most straightforward issue first. Many antitrust cases founder on the issue of market power, especially when world markets are at issue. But Steel Co. made it abundantly clear that courts are not entitled simply to assume jurisdiction and resolve an easy merits issue, if true subject matter jurisdiction is at stake.
If something affects the subject matter jurisdiction of the court, there are a number of other consequences which would be undesirable for the FTAIA. First, there is necessarily never a time when the question cannot be raised. As the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized, the fundamental competence of the court to act can be challenged at any time, up to and including at the Supreme Court level. See, e.g., Mansfield, C. & L.M. Ry. Co. v. Swan,
Second, characterization affects removal. Recall that the subject matter rules indicate whether the case falls within the limited jurisdiction of the federal courts. If it does not, then it presumptively can be heard by a state court of general jurisdiction. Although the federal antitrust laws are commonly held to fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts, nothing requires Congress to keep things that way. If Congress indeed meant to strip the federal courts of subject matter jurisdiction over foreign commerce antitrust cases, then those cases revert to state courts. No one has suggested that we can also divine from the language of the FTAIA a congressional intent to deny any U.S. forum whatsoever for foreign commerce cases. (Indeed, serious constitutional questions would arise if we were to read the statute as purporting to define the jurisdiction of the state courts, given the degree of sovereignty the states retain under the federal Constitution.) Thus, state courts can and will hear foreign commerce antitrust cases where "direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable" effects are missing. Some of those state courts might dismiss on forum non conveniens grounds; some might apply their own test for whether a claim is stated and dismiss on the merits; some might keep the case and adjudicate it, creating far greater friction with foreign sovereigns than would result from exclusive federal jurisdiction and an elements-based test. Naturally, if this kind of case is filed in state court, it cannot be removed to federal court, because suits may be removed only if they could have been filed originally in a federal court. See 28 U.S.C. § 1441; Syngenta Crop Protection, Inc. v. Henson, ___ U.S. ___,
There are also consequences for appellate review if this is a jurisdictional issue. As already noted, district courts resolve whatever jurisdictional facts are contested in advance of the trial. Appellate review of those fact-findings is deferential. Although the defendants argued that the policies behind the FTAIA — particularly the avoidance of diplomatic tensions with other countries — are better served by the jurisdictional characterization, that assumes that district courts will systematically reject jurisdiction. There is no reason at all to make such an assumption. If district courts find the FTAIA test satisfied, foreign parties will be stuck with deferential appellate review of those facts. This also means that appellate courts will not be free to give plenary consideration to the sensitive issues of international comity that can arise in these cases — issues better resolved at the level of the court of appeals or the Supreme Court than by a solitary district judge. For all these reasons as well, it is preferable to treat the FTAIA as establishing an element of the claim.
The subject matter jurisdiction characterization makes no sense, either from the point of view of the policies being furthered by the FTAIA, or from the standpoint of judicial administration. We should not adopt a perverse decision just because parties have chosen to file motions under Rule 12(b)(1) instead of Rule 12(b)(6) or Rule 56, or because courts have unquestioningly adopted the diction of "subject matter jurisdiction" without careful examination.
IV
Finally, if all the rest of these reasons were not enough to compel an "element" reading, a review of the history of the application of the antitrust laws to persons and conduct beyond the borders of the United States also leads to that result. As the majority notes, the first time the Supreme Court had occasion to consider the question whether the Sherman Act applied to activities outside the United States occurred less than 20 years after the passage of the Act, in American Banana Co. v. United Fruit Co.,
Between the time American Banana was decided and the time when the Second Circuit rendered its Alcoa decision, the Court handed down at least two decisions that qualified the strict territorial view of the former case. See United States v. American Tobacco Co.,
The next major decision addressing the extent to which the U.S. antitrust laws reach foreign parties and conduct was United States v. Aluminum Co. of America,
The Alcoa decision was not warmly received in other countries, which as of the mid-1940s did not as a rule have antitrust laws and which resented the apparent effort of the United States to act as the world's competition police officer.1 See generally Spencer Weber Waller, Antitrust and American Business Abroad, vol. I, ch. 4. This led to an outpouring of scholarly writing on the general question of the way prescriptive jurisdictional lines should be drawn among nations from the perspective of public international law. The fruits of this effort appear today in the American Law Institute's influential Restatement (Third) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States ("Restatement Third"), Part IV (1987), which addresses the subject of jurisdiction and judgments. The Restatement Third identifies three types of jurisdictional limitations recognized by international law: those on jurisdiction to prescribe ("i.e. to make [the state's] law applicable to the activities, relations, or status of persons, or the interests of persons in things, whether by legislation, by executive act or order, by administrative rule or regulation, or by determination of a court"), those on jurisdiction to adjudicate, and those on jurisdiction to enforce. Restatement Third, § 401. Section 415 of the Restatement Third is devoted specifically to jurisdiction to regulate anti-competitive activities.
The commentary to section 401 addresses exactly the problem now before us: that is, what is the relation between the various heads of jurisdiction identified in the Restatement and the domestic U.S. concept of "subject matter jurisdiction." Comment c reads as follows:
"Subject matter jurisdiction," in common usage in other contexts, is not used in this Restatement. This term sometimes refers to the constitutional authority of a governmental body, for example the authority of Congress under the United States Constitution to legislate on a subject (principally under Article I, Section 8), or the authority of a State of the United States to legislate within constitutional limitations on State authority (Article I, Section 10). The term is also often used in judicial decisions to describe other limitations on governmental authority, including those involving the reach of United States law, addressed in this Restatement as jurisdiction to prescribe. Jurisdiction to prescribe with respect to transnational activity depends not on a particular link, such as minimum contacts ("use of the mails," or "crossing state lines"), which have been used to define "subject matter jurisdiction" for constitutional purposes, but on a concept of reasonableness based on a number of factors to be considered and evaluated. §§ 402-403.
Thus, the domestic concept of subject matter jurisdiction has no bearing on the question whether the United States validly prescribed a certain rule of law. Section 415 offers detailed guidance on the scope of prescriptive jurisdiction in cases dealing with anticompetitive activities.2
It is this topic of prescriptive jurisdiction, and how far the U.S. antitrust laws were actually reaching, that was before Congress when it enacted the FTAIA. (While it is true that the House Report on the FTAIA uses the word "jurisdiction" with some regularity, it also speaks repeatedly about whether U.S. antitrust law should be applied to particular transactions. See H.R.Rep. No. 97-686, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. (1982), U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News at 2487. It is therefore impossible to draw any firm conclusions from that brief document that will assist us in resolving the issue presently before us.) Congress was trying simultaneously to assure U.S. companies that they would not be subject to potentially stricter U.S. antitrust laws when they were conducting business wholly in foreign markets, and to assure foreign countries and their citizens that they would not be swept into a U.S. court to answer under U.S. law for actions that were of no legitimate concern to the United States. Ronald W. Davis, International Cartel and Monopolization Cases Expose a Gap in Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act, 15 Sum-Antitrust 53, 53-58 (2001). This much is fairly clear. What has not been clear has been the way in which the FTAIA itself has been handled in the federal courts.
At one level, virtually everyone concedes that federal subject matter jurisdiсtion exists in cases like United Phosphorus's. The claim certainly arises under a federal law—the Sherman Act—and thus falls within the scope of 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and 28 U.S.C. § 1337. Furthermore, typically no one claims that the claim presented is so frivolous that jurisdiction fails under the principle acknowledged in Bell v. Hood,
Although several courts of appeals have decided dismissal motions based on the FTAIA under the rubric of "subject matter jurisdiction," see, e.g., Empagran S.A. v. F. Hoffman-LaRoche, Ltd.,
Indeed, in the most recent of these decisions, Empagran, the court was singularly unconcerned with the distinction between these two approaches. It certainly speaks of a lack of "subject matter jurisdiction" under the federal antitrust laws,
We hold that where the anticompetitive conduct has the requisite harm on United States commerce, FTAIA permits suits by foreign plaintiffs who are injured solely by that conduct's effect on foreign commerce. The anticompetitive effect itself must violate the Sherman Act and the conduct's harmful effect on United States commerce must give rise to "a claim" by someone, even if not the foreign plaintiff who is before the court.
Id. at 341. In other words, if one is to take the "subject matter jurisdiction" characterization seriously, the court is competent to decide the case only if it concludes (tentatively? conclusively?) that the statute has been violated and someone has standing to sue. With all due respect to my colleagues in the D.C. Circuit, I find such an approach to subject matter to be inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decisions in cases like Steel Co. and Bell v. Hood. (For the record, I am not necessarily expressing any disagreement with the ultimate result in Empagran; my concern is only with this implicit part of the court's rationale.)
Even more troublesome is the court's analysis of subject matter jurisdiction. It begins with the observation that its review is de novo.
A complaint may be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction only if "`it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.'" Sinclair v. Kleindienst,
The Second Circuit's Kruman decision also spoke in terms of a "subject matter jurisdiction" dismissal, see
V
For all these reasons, I believe that the FTAIA adds an element to an antitrust claim for cases, as the statute puts it, that present "conduct involving trade or commerce (other than import trade or import commerce) with foreign nations." It does not strip the federal courts of subject matter jurisdiction in those cases—a conclusion that would leave the court powerless to make a ruling on the merits of the case, and that would leave the defendants open to suit either in state courts or before other tribunals, judicial or arbitral. The majority's conclusion will also have significant effects on the government's criminal antitrust enforcement program. The Sherman Act, of course, makes it a serious felony to enter into an agreement in restraint of trade. The current Acting Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Department of Justice's Antitrust Division, R. Hewitt Pate, recently had the following comments about the Department's international criminal enforcement:
Since late 1996, the Division has prosecuted international cartels affecting over $10 billion in U.S. commerce. Well over 90 percent of the total criminal fines we have obtained in this time period were from international cartel cases.... The international cartels we have uncovered involved a wide range of industries, including the food and feed additives, graphite electrode, vitamins, construction, fine arts, and textile industries....
Recеntly, we have concentrated not just on prosecuting corporate cartel members but also on punishing individuals who create and operate the cartels.... In the past fiscal year, defendants in Division cases were sentenced to more than 10,000 jail days—a record—with an average sentence of more than 18 months.... It is not just U.S. executives who are facing prison sentences, but foreign executives as well....
Turning to our current docket, we now have almost forty grand juries investigating suspected international cartel activity, representing almost half of the Division's criminal investigations.
R. Hewitt Pate, "The DOJ International Antitrust Program—Maintaining Momentum," Speech Before the American Bar Association Section of Antitrust Law, 2003 Forum on International Competition Law, New York City, February 6, 2003, available at http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/public/speeches/200736.pdf (emphasis in original). The government will not want to conduct these investigations in the Seventh Circuit. Defects going to the subject matter of the court can be raised at any time, even if a defendant has pleaded guilty (and guilty pleas play the same important role in antitrust prosecutions as they do in other fields of criminal law). See, e.g., United States v. Cotton,
It is important to recall, finally, that there is nothing unique about international antitrust cases. If effect-on-commerce rules are truly jurisdictional, then they are jurisdictional for every statute that contains commerce elements. Countless statutes do, particularly since the Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Lopez,
I respectfully dissent.
Notes:
Notes
Chief Judge Flaum and Circuit Judge Williams did not participate in the consideration or decision of this case
The dissent suggests, incorrectly we think, that our decision will move government prosecutors to avoid thе Seventh Circuit when investigating criminal violations of the Sherman Act. We don't think so. But we add that if the dissent is correct, the government will not only have to avoid the Seventh Circuit, but also all the other circuits that say, as we do here, that the requirement of an effect on U.S. commerce relates to subject matter jurisdiction. Finally, we fail to see the harm to Sherman Act criminal prosecutions that concerns the dissent. If the government can't prove to a judge a minimum requirement that activity alleged to be in violation of U.S. criminal law had an effect on U.S. commerce, it shouldn't be bringing a Sherman Act case in the first place
Today, over 90 countries have competition laws. See,e.g., Diane P. Wood, "International Harmonization of Antitrust Law: The Tortoise or the Hare?" 3 Chicago J. Int'l L. 391, 392 n. 6 (2002). Interestingly, the number of disputes over so-called extraterritorial applications of national laws, whether by the United States, the European Union, or others, has dropped dramatically. Discussions today tend to focus on better ways of coordinating these many national-level regimes, and antitrust authorities around the world are eager to cooperate with one another within the confines established by national confidentiality laws.
The text and commentary of section 415 is also informative:
§ 415. Jurisdiction To Regulate Anti-Competitive Activities
(1) Any agreement in restraint of United States trade that is made in the United States, and any conduct or agreement in restraint of such trade that is carried out in significant measure in the United States, are subject to the jurisdictiоn to prescribe of the United States, regardless of the nationality or place of business of the parties to the agreement or of the participants in the conduct.
(2) Any agreement in restraint of United States trade that is made outside of the United States, and any conduct or agreement in restraint of such trade that is carried out predominantly outside of the United States, are subject to the jurisdiction to prescribe of the United States, if a principal purpose of the conduct or agreement is to interfere with the commerce of the United States, and the agreement or conduct has some effect on that commerce.
(3) Other agreements or conduct in restraint of United States trade are subject to the jurisdiction to prescribe of the United States if such agreements or conduct have substantial effect on the commerce of the United States and the exercise of jurisdiction is not unreasonable.
Comment b to this section quotes the FTAIA in full, and goes on to say that "Congress apparently believed that activity whose anti-competitive effects are felt only in foreign states should not be a concern of United States antitrust regulation, but that activities carried out abroad that have `direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable' effect in the United States or on the import trade of the United States (as by limiting imports or fixing the price of imported products) should be subject to the Sherman and FTC Acts."
