1983-1 Trade Cases 65,320
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
SOUTHERN MOTOR CARRIERS RATE CONFERENCE, INC., and North
Carolina Motor Carriers Association, Inc.,
Defendants-Appellants,
National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners,
Intervenor-Appellant.
No. 79-3741.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.*
Unit B
April 11, 1983.
Allen I. Hirsch, Simon A. Miller, Atlanta, Ga., for Southern Motor carriers.
Rea, Cross & Auchincloss, Bryce Rea, Jr., David Hyler Coburn, Washington, D.C., for North Carolina Motor and amicus curiae Nat. Motor Freight Traffic Ass'n.
Paul Rodgers, Gen. Counsel, Charles D. Gray and Pamela R. Melton, Washington, D.C., for intervenor.
Robert P. Gruber, Gen. Counsel, Wilson B. Partin, Jr., Deputy Gen. Counsel, Raleigh, N.C., for amicus curiae State of N.C. and N.C. Utilities Comm.
Barry Grossman, Nancy C. Garrison, Appellate Sec., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Before GODBOLD, Chief Judge, RONEY, TJOFLAT, HILL, FAY, VANCE, KRAVITCH, FRANK M. JOHNSON, Jr., HENDERSON, HATCHETT, ANDERSON and THOMAS A. CLARK, Circuit Judges.
FRANK M. JOHNSON, Jr., Circuit Judge:
In November 1976 the United States instituted this action under Section 4 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. Sec. 4, to enjoin the continuing violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.A. Sec. 1, by three rate bureaus. These defendants, Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, Inc. (SMCRC), North Carolina Motor Carriers Association, Inc. (NCMCA), and Motor Carriers Traffic Association, Inc. (MCTA), represent common carriers before the regulatory commissions of the states of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Tennessee. The rate bureaus perform three basic functions: (1) they provide a forum for competing member carriers to discuss and agree on rates for intrastate transportation of general commodities to be proposed to state public service commissions for approval; (2) they publish tariffs and supplements containing the rates on which the carriers agree; and (3) they provide counsel, staff experts, and facilities for the preparation of cost studies and other exhibits and testimony for use in support of proposed rates at hearings held by the regulatory commissions.1 The government challenged the first of these functions as price fixing in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
The district court granted the government's motion for summary judgment and held that defendants were in violation of Section 1. The court rejected arguments2 that defendants' activities were immune under the state action doctrine or under the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. Defendants SMCRC and NCMCA and intervenor NARUC appealed, and a panel of the former Fifth Circuit affirmed. United States v. Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, Inc.,
The Supreme Court first clearly articulated the "state action" exception to the antitrust laws in Parker v. Brown,
The fact that the Court in Parker concluded that Congress did not intend to restrain anticompetitive acts attributable to states of course did not mean that only states could assert a state action defense. Thus, while Parker's holding applied to state party defendants, the Supreme Court in Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
After Goldfarb, the question remained as to what would be required in addition to the threshold compulsion requirement for a finding of state action for private parties. This question was partially answered the next term in Cantor v. Detroit Edison Co.,
In our view, the analytical basis for Goldfarb 's compulsion requirement for private parties traces its roots directly to the analysis in Parker. The lesson of Parker is that the legislative history and wording of the Sherman Act point to the conclusion that Congress wished to restrain the anticompetitive actions of "persons," that is, "individuals and corporations." Thus, an anticompetitive action undertaken by a private party necessarily is proscribed by the Sherman Act unless for some reason that action cannot fairly be attributed to the private party. Under Goldfarb, when a state compels the private party to act, it deprives him of his freedom of choice; his action, being mere obedience, cannot be described as individual action and must therefore be attributed to the state. The Court elaborated on this freedom of choice analysis in Cantor after reviewing Supreme Court cases involving state action immunity:
In each of these cases the initiation and enforcement of the program under attack involved a mixture of private and public decisionmaking. In each case, notwithstanding the state participation in the decision, the private party exercised sufficient freedom of choice to enable the Court to conclude that he should be held responsible for the consequences of his decision.
A necessary corollary of the rationale of Goldfarb and Cantor is that compulsion should not be required of state defendants. Regardless of their motives for undertaking anticompetitive behavior, states are nevertheless acting as states.10 Since Goldfarb, the Court has consistently pointed out that the analysis of state action differs substantially depending on whether the defendant is a private party or a public institution. See, e.g., Bates,
Under the foregoing analysis of the state action doctrine, we have little difficulty in holding that the activities of appellants are not immune from Sherman Act coverage. Specifically, a defense of state action fails because this litigation was brought against private defendants and none of the states in question compels the ratemaking bureaus to set rates collectively.11 Because the anticompetitive practices challenged by the government are undertaken at the individual election of the carriers and the rate bureaus, appellants fail to pass the threshold test established in Goldfarb. Thus, appellants' action cannot be said to constitute state action.
Appellants, however, urge that state action analysis has been changed in their favor by the recent Supreme Court decision in California Retail Liquor Dealers Association v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
Initially, we question the very premise upon which appellants' argument is based--that the specific choice of wording in Midcal implies a rejection of a compulsion requirement for private parties. In the context of private parties, the first Midcal standard makes sense only if it includes a compulsion requirement. This is because we do not see how a private party can carry out a clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed state policy when it is left to the private party to carry out that policy or not as he sees fit. Our interpretation of the disputed passage in Midcal is that it should be read as a broad, general restatement of the Court's earlier holdings; the absence of any mention of compulsion in one specific application of the standard--that is, to private parties--therefore does not strike us as unusual. One additional factor points to the conclusion that the Court's choice of wording in Midcal does not imply a rejection of its prior holdings. The Court introduced the two standards with the statement that the prior decisions "establish" the standards,
Our interpretation of Midcal is supported by the consideration that that case had nothing to do with the applicability of a state action defense to a private party. Midcal involved an action by a wholesale distributor of wine for a writ of mandate for an injunction against the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control--a state agency.13 Because, as we said earlier, Parker immunity for state defendants does not require compulsion, it makes sense that the Court did not require compulsion of the state Department.14 Moreover, because the Court's holding against state action immunity in Midcal was grounded on the fact that the second standard, requiring active state supervision, was lacking, it is not surprising that the Court did not articulate a standard designed to encompass every conceivable state action case. The Court's citation to City of Lafayette --a non-private party case--immediately after listing the two standards further evidences that the Court's focus was only on cases involving public defendants. The Supreme Court recently agreed with our reading of this passage, referring to Midcal as having adopted the principle "that anticompetitive restraints engaged in by state municipalities or subdivisions must be 'clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed as state policy' in order to gain an antitrust exemption. Midcal,
Appellants suggest that their view of the state action doctrine does not really constitute a significant change from prior law, arguing that Goldfarb would have come out the same way under their reading of Midcal because in Goldfarb the minimum fee schedule lacked even state authorization. Such speculation, however, ignores the fact that the Supreme Court in Goldfarb could not possibly have been more clear in imposing a compulsion requirement on private parties. The very basis of the Court's holding was that compulsion was lacking; having made that determination, the Court reached no other issues, including whether the state had authorized the bar association's action. More importantly, reading a compulsion requirement out of the private party state action doctrine would require a complete reformulation of the theoretical foundations for state action first established in Parker. Under the view of federalism espoused in Parker and followed in Goldfarb and Cantor, the Court's inquiry focuses on the wording and intent of the Sherman Act in determining whether private action is mere obedience to a state command and therefore effectively the action of the state itself. Under appellants' view of federalism, on the other hand, Congress' explicit legislative determination to reach the conduct of "individuals and corporations" may be overridden by a state's decision to implement a voluntary supervision scheme that permits but does not compel anticompetitive behavior.16 Even if such a view of federal-state relations could be supported, its adoption would require at least some explanation or discussion. In Midcal there was none. Additionally, appellants' view of state action for private parties would raise extremely difficult practical questions of interpretation and application. For example, appellants presumably do not dispute the continued validity of the Court's statement in Cantor in 1976 that state authorization, approval, encouragement, or participation in restrictive private conduct does not confer antitrust immunity. See
The final reason why we conclude that Midcal does not represent a rejection of a compulsion requirement for private parties is found in the language of the opinion itself. The Court chose to cite Goldfarb with approval, and even quoted from it to the effect that "[i]t is not enough that ... anticompetitive conduct is 'prompted' by state action; rather, anticompetitive activities must be compelled by direction of the State acting as a sovereign."
In addition to arguing that Midcal represents a rejection of a compulsion requirement for private parties, appellants also rely on various policy arguments against affirming the judgment of the district court. Even if we were not bound by the Supreme Court's decisions in Goldfarb and Cantor, we would find these arguments unpersuasive.
Appellants argue first that competition is undermined by a state action requirement that allows states to eliminate competition completely but not to maintain a policy that gives parties the choice of whether or not to compete. But the rationale of the state action doctrine is federalism, not the maximization of competition. As we stated earlier, it is the source of the decision not to compete--not the extent of competition--which determines whether state action exists.18 Unless it is the state rather than the individual or corporation that decides to act anticompetitively, a state action defense would be inconsistent with the wording and intent of the Sherman Act.
Appellants also urge that if we uphold the injunction against collective ratemaking and require competition among carriers, carriers will face the burden of additional expense in preparing individual rate filings. They also assert that the ability of state regulators to perform their task will be undermined. Even if these assertions were supported in the record,19 they would be irrelevant to proper antitrust analysis. Appellants' objections amount to the argument that competition does not work well, so the antitrust laws should not apply. This argument has consistently been rejected by the Supreme Court. See National Society of Professional Engineers v. United States,
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that the district court properly decided that appellants were not entitled to claim state action immunity. On application for rehearing en banc appellants suggest no fault with the panel's determination that the Sherman Act was violated or that the Noerr-Pennington doctrine does not apply to the challenged activities. Accordingly, we reinstate that part of the panel opinion dealing with these issues,
JAMES C. HILL, Circuit Judge, with whom RONEY, R. LANIER ANDERSON, III, and THOMAS A. CLARK, Circuit Judges, join dissenting:
Once again, I respectfully dissent from the court's ruling that compulsion is an essential element of state action immunity when a state action defense is raised by a private defendant. I write not to profess great admiration for the existence of a state action exemption to federal antitrust laws, but rather to uphold what the Supreme Court has clearly articulated to be the status of the law in this area. The majority view that the Supreme Court could not possibly have meant what it said in California Retail Liquor Dealers Association v. Midcal Aluminum, Inc.,
The principal flaw in the majority's position is not that it misinterprets the line of cases developing the doctrine of state action immunity. The court's analysis leading to its conclusion that compulsion is an essential element of the immunity for a private defendant certainly is plausible. However, the Supreme Court reached a different conclusion after examining the same line of cases, and the structure of the federal court system demands that we adhere to its ruling.
After reviewing the state action cases commencing with Parker v. Brown,
Using Parker as its foundation, the Court went on to evaluate several recent decisions applying Parker's analysis. The line of cases discussed in this portion of Midcal include those involving private defendants, Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar,
When a state enacts a regulatory scheme characterized by a clearly articulated state policy and active and effective supervision over implementation of that policy, but its policy is that of permissive joint ratemaking, the state's policy will be undermined whether governmental entities or private participants are the subject of the lawsuit; few private companies will be foolish enough to participate in valid and constructive state programs when such participation is clouded by the threat of antitrust liability.1 As Justice Stewart noted in Cantor,
If Parker v. Brown ... could be circumvented by the simple expedient of suing the private party against whom the State's "anticompetitive" command runs, then that holding would become an empty formalism, standing for little more than the proposition that Porter Brown sued the wrong parties.
Cantor,
Unlike an arbitrary compulsion requirement, the Midcal test affords states greater flexibility in the formation of constructive regulatory programs so long as the state clearly and affirmatively expresses its intent to do so and remains continuously and actively involved. Midcal demands a very high degree of state involvement before state action immunity may be claimed. The Court did not purport to expand application of the doctrine, or to overrule Goldfarb. Instead, Midcal simply clarifies that the focus for immunity purposes should be upon the extent of the state's involvement in the challenged activity--that is upon the kind of imprint of state authority the anti-competitive activity bears. Compulsion certainly remains a relevant factor in this determination. Indeed, it is the best evidence that a challenged restraint is a "clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed" state policy. As Professor Areeda has observed, after Midcal, "literal compulsion is powerful evidence, if not determinative, of the existence of state policy, but is neither necessary nor sufficient for Parker immunity." P. Areeda, Antitrust Law p 212.5 at 62 (Supp.1982); see also Turf Paradise, Inc. v. Arizona Downs,
Nevertheless, the majority insists that compulsion must be the litmus test for the first prong of Midcal for a nongovernmental defendant. It relies primarily upon the fact that Midcal did not expressly overrule the compulsion language in Goldfarb. Admittedly, Goldfarb does suggest that as the state action exemption was developing the Supreme Court anticipated that some type of compulsion might be incorporated into the doctrine.3 The Court's early references to compulsion, however, were ill-defined and were not restricted to cases involving private defendants. As noted in footnote ten of the majority's opinion, compulsion was discussed in both Bates and Parker wherein governmental defendants were the subject of antitrust scrutiny. Scholars and lower courts also were uncertain about the nature of the compulsion requirement and whether it was a requirement at all.4 In Midcal, however, the Supreme Court reviewed its earlier treatment of compulsion, and concluded that the state action doctrine had developed to the point where a single test could provide the necessary analysis and satisfy the concerns articulated in Goldfarb. Thus, as the Ninth Circuit already has observed, "It appears that the statement in Goldfarb regarding compulsion refers to a combination of the criteria that there be both a clear articulation of state policy and active supervision by the state itself.
Clearly, "a state does not give immunity to those who violate the Sherman Act by authorizing them to violate it, or by declaring that their action is lawful." Parker,
The Court's recent decision of Community Communications Co. v. City of Boulder,
The majority, however, would adhere to the position that the only way a state can articulate a clear and express policy (when a private defendant is sued) is by compelling all carriers to engage in collective ratemaking. Thus, the court maintains that if a motor carrier is permitted to join in the development and submission of joint rates through the bureaus, at its election, such a program cannot be a clearly and affirmatively expressed state policy. Initially, it seems clear that a state can articulate clearly a policy which incorporates both the benefits of joint ratemaking and separate filings. Indeed, such a policy of permissive joint ratemaking may be far superior to the complete mandatory joint ratemaking suggested by the majority. As the district court suggested, rate bureaus provide important support services to state regulatory bodies such as the staff experts and facilities necessary to collate data for the preparation of cost studies. See United States v. Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, Inc.,
The irony of this litigation is that the Government seeks to enjoin states from implementing a transportation policy which parallels our national transportation policy. Federal law regulating interstate motor carriers adopts a policy of permissive joint ratemaking, and if a carrier chooses to participate in government approved collective ratemaking it is expressly exempt from antitrust liability. 49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 10706(b)(2) (West Supp.1982), former 49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 5(b) (1959). Drafters of the original federal exemption for collective interstate ratemaking, upon which North Carolina's law is modeled, stated the following with respect to the conflict between the antitrust laws and national transportation policy:
It is recognized by all who are familiar with the problems of transportation that the carriers subject to the Interstate Commerce Act cannot satisfactorily meet their duties and responsibilities thereunder and the basic purposes of the Act cannot be effectively carried out, unless such carriers are permitted to engage in joint activities to a substantial extent.... It is obvious that confusion and uncertainty are inevitable where these two principles of public policy [antitrust laws and national transportation policy], administered and enforced by different agencies, are applied in such a way that there is conflict between them.
H.Rep. No. 1100, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 4-5 (1947); S.Rep. No. 44, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 3-4 (1947). Although there have been modifications of the statutory exemption for interstate carriers engaged in collective ratemaking, and there are those who would disagree with the current status of the federal regulatory framework, few would seriously argue that the federal government had not clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed a national transportation policy of permissive joint ratemaking.
Further evidence of an articulation of state policy is the fact that all rates are closely supervised by the state.5 This also illustrates the importance of satisfying both prongs of the Midcal test, for together they satisfy the function served by the Goldfarb formulation. The active supervision requirement is essential to the Midcal test because it inhibits the influence of economic self interest of the companies involved in the rate setting process. Such private self interest does not warrant the cloak of state action immunity. But, by requiring that a state actively supervise implementation of its economic policy, the Midcal test ensures that the state has determined that the challenged activity is in furtherance of the state's policy. When the state ceases to be the real party in interest, the sovereignty of the state cannot be said to be impaired by withholding state action immunity.6 But when the state is the real party in interest, its continuous and active supervision evidences its intent to impose state regulation in lieu of open market competition, and withholding antitrust immunity does impair state sovereignty.
Because it is the requirement of active supervision which deters abuse of joint ratemaking procedures, if any distinction is to be drawn between public and private defendants, it should be in the amount of supervision deemed necessary to satisfy this portion of the Midcal test. It makes no sense to require compulsion for private and not public defendants when in both instances the same state policy will be thwarted by the threat of antitrust liability. Looking to the degree of active supervision, on the other hand, may be more relevant in a suit against a private defendant because it is possible that abuse of the state system may be an issue.7 Nevertheless, because the Government does not challenge the adequacy of any state's supervision in the present case, there is no reason to draw this distinction.
The only issue in this case, therefore, is whether the individual states involved clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed state policy in favor of permissive ratemaking. As set forth in my original dissent, I think it clear that the states of North Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia have such a policy. Nevertheless, because the district court entered a final judgment before the Supreme Court's pronouncements in Midcal, I would remand the case for further development of the factual record and for evaluation under the Midcal test.
THOMAS A. CLARK, Circuit Judge, with whom RONEY, Circuit Judge, joins dissenting:
I concur in Judge Hill's dissent and his thorough analysis of Midcal which demonstrates that compulsion is not a prerequisite for application of the state action exception.
Differing interpretations of Supreme Court opinions are not uncommon. What disturbs me so deeply about the majority opinion is that it completely ignores the Interstate Commerce Act, public policy, history, and fairness. As pointed out by Judge Hill, the functions of rate bureaus or conferences declared illegal by the majority have been accepted national policy for more than thirty years. These same defendants have performed the identical functions1 for interstate carriers whose rates are fixed by the Interstate Commerce Commission. These functions, when performed by these bureaus for interstate carriers are exempted from the Antitrust Act by the Interstate Commerce Act:
As provided by this subsection, a motor common carrier of property providing transportation or service subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission under subchapter II of chapter 105 of this title may enter into an agreement with one or more such carriers concerning rates (including charges between carriers and compensation paid or received for the use of facilities and equipment), allowances, classifications, divisions, or rules related to them, or procedures for joint consideration, initiation, or establishment of them.... If the Commission approves the agreement, it may be made and carried out under its terms and under the conditions required by the Commission, and the antitrust laws, as defined in the first section of the Clayton Act (15 U.S.C. 12), do not apply to parties and other persons with respect to making or carrying out the agreement.
49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 10706(b)(2).
The states involved here likewise permit joint filings of rates by carriers through the medium of a bureau or conference, and permit individual carriers to file their own rates. Thus, not all carriers are compelled to file rates through a conference or bureau. The majority holds that if a state compelled uniform action by the carriers, such a state statute would meet the Parker v. Brown requirement of state action and joint action would be exempt from the antitrust statute. Again, I turn to the Interstate Commerce Act and find that the national act forbids exclusive rate-fixing in the following manner:
(2) The Commission may not approve an agreement under this section--
* * *
* * *
(C) establishing a procedure for determination of a matter through joint consideration unless the Commission finds that each party to the agreement has the absolute right under it to take independent action before or after a determination is made under that procedure.
49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 10706(d)(2). Thus, as can be seen, the Commission does not compel carriers to participate in the agreement. The state statutes are patterned very much after the national act, permitting joint action through the bureaus and conferences, but also permitting individual action.
By way of hypothecation, Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, Inc. may file with the Interstate Commerce Commission rates for the carriage of carpeting from Rome, Georgia, to Nashville, Tennessee. That same Conference may perform the identical function for the intrastate carriage of carpeting from Rome to Macon, Georgia, approximately the same distance. This has been done for three decades prior to the filing of this action in 1976. It is patently unfair at this late date to declare that these defendants violated the antitrust act when following identical procedures that are not violative of the antitrust act when done in interstate commerce.
Notes
Former Fifth Circuit case (Section 9(3) of Public Law 96-452--October 14, 1980)
For further elaboration of the facts regarding the role of the rate bureaus, their relationship with the state regulatory commissions, and the general pattern of regulatory procedures in the five subject states, see the district court's carefully written opinion. United States v. Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, Inc.,
In the district court, the state attorneys general of the states of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Tennessee participated as amici curiae. The National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) also was allowed to participate as an intervenor
Appellants seek to characterize Parker as a case in which individual growers were not compelled to act anticompetitively, citing a provision of the program which permitted growers to set aside up to 30% of their crops for sale on the free market. The 30% set-aside provision, however, did not affect the ability of a grower to elect not to participate as to the remaining 70% of his crops. In this sense, the state mandated the participation of every grower and compelled the challenged anticompetitive behavior
Significantly, this reference to federalism concerns was directed not to any limitation on Congress' power to act; instead, it was stated merely as a rule of statutory interpretation--that is, whether and to what extent Congress had chosen to override existing state regulation
The State Bar was, for "some limited purposes," a state agency.
In determining whether compulsion is present, we do not believe that private parties may have no role in proposing mandatory state action. In Parker and New Motor Vehicle Bd. v. Orrin W. Fox Co.,
In a prior part of the opinion (Part II) Justice Stevens, joined only by three other members of the Court, concluded that Parker should be limited to suits against state officials
The disagreement in the Court centered on what in addition to compulsion was required for state action immunity for private parties. In fact, Justice Stewart, joined by Justices Powell and Rehnquist, argued that Michigan's decision to adopt Detroit Edison's proposal and then compel compliance with it should have been by itself sufficient for state action immunity
Another rationale for the compulsion requirement is that if a private party is permitted by the state to make the choice whether or not to compete, there is no necessary conflict between state and federal law because the private party may comply with both federal and state law at the same time
We acknowledge that Bates and Parker, which involved state defendants, discussed the presence of compulsion, but we view those cases--as appellants would have us do--as instances in which the presence of compulsion provides the best evidence of clear articulation and affirmative expression of state policy to displace competition
The district court found that "regardless of the virtual romance between the states and the ratemaking conferences, no state requires that rates be published collectively."
The government points out that the district court conducted no fact-finding as to this issue. The record, however, reveals that the state commissions conduct hearings to review the reasonableness of proposed carrier tariffs and routinely suspend their effectiveness
In the Supreme Court, petitioner California Retail Liquor Dealers Association had appealed the case as an intervenor
In any event, compulsion was in fact present in Midcal. See
Appellants cite several lower court cases in support of their position, but only two of them actually found that private parties were immune without compulsion by the state. The first, Caribe Trailer Systems, Inc. v. Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Authority,
Appellants reason that the Court eliminated the compulsion requirement because the basis for state compulsion is the concern that the economic self interest of private parties might affect the rate setting process and, according to appellants, the second standard in Midcal--the requirement of state supervision--assuages that concern. They assert that a supervision requirement adequately ensures that the state has determined that the challenged activity is in furtherance of the state's policy and that the state does not abdicate its responsibility to private parties. We disagree with this analysis. If the second Midcal standard accomplished as much as appellants claim, there would have been no need for the first standard. Further, if compulsion and supervision served the same purpose, the Supreme Court would have upheld, rather than denied, state action immunity in Midcal because compulsion was present in that case. See
The mere fact that anticompetitive conduct by a private party effectuates a clearly articulated state regulatory policy is not in itself sufficient to justify a state action defense against injunctive relief. The defense is only available if the state has elected to effectuate its policy by requiring the private conduct under attack
Note, Parker v. Brown Revisited: The State Action Doctrine After Goldfarb, Cantor and Bates, 77 Colum.L.Rev. 898, 916 (1977) (emphasis in original). The Note, at the end of the relevant section, was even more definite: "To summarize, a state action defense against injunctive relief should be available for private conduct only if the state has specifically required the conduct in question without abdicating final decisionmaking authority to private parties." Id. at 918.
The same footnote in the Midcal opinion also cited Norman's on the Waterfront, Inc. v. Wheatley,
Thus, a state may exempt a specific subclass of carriers from regulation or, as in Parker, it may predetermine a set amount or type of activity that may remain in the free market. In both of these cases, the state controls and sets the terms of the individual decision as to whether to compete. But where the option to compete or join a system of state regulation at all is up to the private party, state action does not exist
We note that the government did not seek to enjoin the rate bureaus from performing joint rate studies or from undertaking joint publication of individual rates and agreements involving two or more parties who provide joint service
We also agree with the panel's determination that there is no implied immunity from the antitrust laws resulting from the antitrust exemption granted motor carriers under 49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 10706, or from the existence of pervasive state regulation permitted by 49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 10521(b). See
There may be substantive limits on what conduct the state may immunize by making the challenged restraint a state policy. Indeed, there is some suggestion in Supreme Court precedent that federal antitrust laws do place substantive limits on the content of state economic regulation. See, e.g., Schwegmann Bros. v. Calvert Distillers Corp.,
Here, however, the states are involved in a type of private utility regulation. The ability to regulate motor carriers involved in intrastate activities not only is a traditional state regulatory function, but also is an authority reserved to the states by the Congress. 49 U.S.C.A. Sec. 10521(b) (West Supp.1982).
In Parker the Court concluded that "The Sherman Act makes no mention of the state as such, and gives no hint that it was intended to restrain state action or official action directed by a state."
At least one commentator has suggested that "[t]he compulsion requirement was an overreaction to the facts presented in Goldfarb, where the conduct challenged was actually contrary to the pronouncements of the state, and in Cantor, where the state agency never addressed the practice involved in any meaningful manner." M. Handler, supra at 64. Professor Areeda also agrees with this assessment:
Indeed, Goldfarb and Cantor may be readily explained as decisions resting not on the absence of compulsion, but rather on the absence of any sort of meaningful state participation in the challenged conduct. In Goldfarb, the defendants were private groups enforcing fee schedules without adequate state authority or supervision. The essence of Cantor was the state's presumed indifference to the utility's "free" light bulb program; state approval, even if deliberate, was not intended to displace the antitrust laws.
Areeda, Antitrust Immunity for "State Action" After LaFayette, 95 Harv.L.Rev. 435, 439 n. 19 (1981).
Prior to Midcal, Professors Areeda and Turner observed that the precise meaning of the compulsion test and its role in determining immunity was left unclear by Goldfarb and Cantor. 1 P. Areeda & D. Turner, Antitrust Law p 215 at 93 (1978); accord Caribe Trailer Systems, Inc. v. Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Authority,
While we treat these as separate requirements, we nevertheless want to stress their interrelationship. The existence of state supervision over anticompetitive behavior may, for example, indicate the requisite state intent as well. Similarly, inaction on the part of the state may both represent a failure of supervision and reflect an ambiguous state purpose
P. Areeda & D. Turner, Antitrust Law p 212 at 71 (1978)
The existence of a state action immunity enables states, like the federal government itself, to define areas inappropriate for market control. Moreover, the adequate supervision criterion ensures that state-federal conflict will be avoided in those areas in which the state has demonstrated its commitment to a program through its exercise of regulatory oversight. At the same time, it guarantees that when the Sherman Act is set aside, private firms are not left to their own devices. Rather, immunity will be granted only when the state has substituted its own supervision for the economic constraints of the competitive market
P. Areeda & D. Turner, Antitrust Law p 213 at 73 (1978) (footnotes omitted)
Professor Areeda has even suggested that Midcal 's active supervision requirement may be inapplicable to governmental defendants. Areeda, Antitrust Immunity for "State Action" After Lafayette, 95 Harv.L.Rev. 435, 445 n. 50 (1981) ("A few courts erroneously appear to use the Midcal formula (clearly articulated state policy plus active supervision of private parties) to require state supervision of governmental defendants.") In Community Communications Co. v. City of Boulder, however, the Supreme Court expressly declined to decide whether the active supervision criterion must be met by a municipality with respect to the challenged ordinance.
Described in the majority opinion, at 534
