OPINION
Plaintiff-appellant Watson Carpet & Floor Covering, Inc. (Watson Carpet) is a carpet dealer in competition with Carpet Den, Inc. and its owner, Rick McCormick. Watson Carpet sued Carpet Den, McCormick, and carpet supplier Mohawk Industries, Inc., for conspiring to restrain trade in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
Watson Carpet alleges that, in 1998, the defendants explicitly agreed to force Watson Carpet out of business by slandering and refusing to deal to Watson Carpet. After Mohawk refused to sell carpet to Watson Carpet the next year, Watson Carpet brought state claims in state court against all three defendants. Carpet Den and McCormick settled the state-court action with Watson Carpet in March 2007, and Watson Carpet released all then-existing claims against those two defendants. While the state-court litigation was ongoing in 2005 and 2006, and in May 2007 after the litigation had ended, Mohawk again refused to sell to Watson Carpet. The 2005, 2006, and 2007 incidents form the basis of the present lawsuit. Despite Watson Carpet’s detailed allegations of an agreement to restrain trade, the district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim, invoking the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
We REVERSE the dismissal of the complaint and hold that Watson Carpet adequately stated a claim for relief. Watson Carpet specifically alleged both an agreement to restrain trade and later acts that furthered the conspiracy. In response, Mohawk proffered alternative explanations for its refusals to sell to Watson Carpet. However, to survive a motion to dismiss, Watson Carpet needs to allege only that the defendants’ agreement plausibly explains the refusals to sell, not that the agreement is the probable or exclusive explanation.
With respect to the cross-appeal, we AFFIRM the district court’s determination that the 2007 refusal to sell is outside the scope of the settlement release. When they settled with Watson Carpet, Carpet Den and McCormick bargained away their liability for the 1999, 2005, and 2006 refusals to sell. They did not withdraw from the conspiracy, however, and conspiracies are presumptively ongoing. As coconspirators with Mohawk, Carpet Den and McCormick remain liable for Mohawk’s post-release actions that furthered the conspiracy, including the 2007 refusal to sell.
I. BACKGROUND
According to the complaint, in 1998, McCormick met with Brad Matthaidess, Mohawk’s Vice President and Senior Manager, and Fred Woods, a Mohawk sales representative. Mohawk is one of two suppliers that dominate 95% of Nashville’s market for production-homebuilder carpet. Wielding that power, the men designed a *455 plan to “run [Watson Carpet] out of business.” R. 1 (ComplJ 15). 1 To carry out the plan, Mohawk would refuse to sell to Watson Carpet. Meanwhile, McCormick, Carpet Den, and Woods “would maliciously make false derogatory accusations about [Watson Carpet and its owner] to Plaintiffs customers and potential customers and others in the industry.” Id. at ¶ 16.
The complaint does not make clear when the defendants began to follow through on their plan, but between paragraphs about events in 1998 and 1999, Watson Carpet claims that McCormick and other Carpet Den and Mohawk agents made “false derogatory accusations” about the company to potential customers, with the goal of hurting Watson Carpet’s business. Id. at ¶¶ 16-17. Their accusations included “that [Watson Carpet’s owner] used drugs, sold drugs, cheated his customers, slept with his employees, had financial problems, had trouble with the IRS, and was in the mob.” Id. at ¶¶ 18-19. McCormick also “instructed his sales people that if they were competing with Plaintiff for a sale they should ‘lowball’ the price ... to keep Plaintiff from getting the sale, even if it meant losing money on the sale.” Id. at 20. In 1999, McCormick told the president of Turnberry Homes, Watson Carpet’s client, that Watson Carpet had stolen money “by pocketing rebates ... that should have been going to Turnberry Homes.” Id. at ¶21. The attempt to undercut Watson Carpet’s business did not succeed: the president of Turnberry Homes believed that McCormick’s accusations were false, and the client continued to purchase from Watson Carpet.
Watson Carpet had less success that same year when it tried to purchase Portico carpet from Mohawk to supply Centex Homes. “Pursuant to and in furtherance of the conspiracy, Defendant Mohawk refused to sell Plaintiff the Portico carpet needed to service Centex,” costing Watson Carpet the client, potential profits, and “almost” its own company. Id. at ¶22.
Although the complaint omits this fact, Watson Carpet sued Mohawk, Carpet Den, and McCormick in state court in 1999 for the Centex incident, alleging “tortious interference with business relationships and civil conspiracy.”
Watson’s Carpet & Floor Coverings, Inc. v. McCormick, et al.,
The Tennessee Court of Appeals issued its decision in January 2007. In March 2007, Carpet Den and McCormick settled with Watson Carpet. In exchange, Watson Carpet released the two defendants “from and against any and all claims ... which [Watson Carpet] may have against them whether such claims are contingent or actual, anticipated or unanticipated, and *456 of whatever kind or nature.” Settlement at ¶ 1. Rather than settling, Mohawk sought review from the Tennessee Supreme Court, which denied permission to appeal.
During the course of the state-court litigation, Mohawk had refused to sell to Watson Carpet for Newmark Homes in 2005 and Pulte Homes in 2006. After the settlement, in May 2007, Mohawk refused to fill Watson Carpet’s order for Wieland Homes. According to the complaint, all three refusals were “[p]ursuant to and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” R. 1 (Compl.1ffl 32, 40, 48).
Watson Carpet sued the defendants in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee in May 2009, alleging three violations of Section 1 of the Sherman Act based on the 2005, 2006, and 2007 refusals to sell. Mohawk filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, asserting that the claims were time-barred and that the complaint was inadequate under Twombly. The district court granted the motion to dismiss, holding that the claims were not time barred, but that the complaint was inadequately particular about whether the 2005, 2006, and 2007 events were related to the original conspiracy or were unilateral refusals to sell to a litigious customer. Carpet Den and McCormick filed a motion for summary judgment or, alternatively, judgment on the pleadings due to the same statute-of-limitations argument that Mohawk raised, and also alleging that the settlement release barred the claims. The district court granted the motion for summary judgment insofar as the settlement release applied to the 2005 and 2006 counts. However, the district court concluded that the settlement release did not apply to the 2007 count, which took place after the parties had signed the release. The district court also determined that the 2007 count fell within the four-year statute of limitations. Nevertheless, as it had done with respect to Mohawk, the district court dismissed the 2007 count against Carpet Den and McCormick for failure to state a claim.
The district court denied a motion for reconsideration in which Watson Carpet claimed that the district court had wrongly required “reaffirm[ation of] the conspiracy.” R. 48 (Dist. Ct. Order Denying Reconsideration) (internal quotation marks omitted). The district court clarified that it had “simply held that the Plaintiff failed to allege facts supporting its conclusory assertions that actions taken by [Mohawk] were related to or in furtherance of the conspiracy allegedly formed in 1998,” or that Carpet Den or McCormick had taken “any actionable steps in furtherance of the alleged conspiracy after the date of the settlement agreement.” Id.
Watson Carpet has appealed the dismissal of its claims. Carpet Den and McCormick have cross-appealed the district court’s determination that the settlement agreement did not bar the 2007 count.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Whether the Complaint States a Plausible Claim for Relief
We review de novo motions to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
In re Travel Agent Comm’n Antitrust Litig.,
Section 1 of the Sherman Act forbids conspiracies “in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. A Section 1 conspiracy requires more than a manufacturer’s unilateral refusal to deal.
Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp.,
Unlike the plaintiffs in Twombly and In re Travel Agent, Watson Carpet clearly has alleged an express agreement to restrain trade. The contentious issue, then, is whether the complaint adequately alleges that the refusals to sell carpet were undertaken as part of that agreement, or whether they were independent actions on Mohawk’s part. We hold that the complaint sufficiently alleges a connection between the original agreement and the later refusals to sell.
Proof that the conspiracy was ongoing is unnecessary because conspiracies presumptively are ongoing until the participants achieve their objective.
United States v. Hayter Oil Co.,
We conclude that Watson Carpet’s complaint plausibly alleges that the 2005, 2006, and 2007 refusals stemmed from Mohawk’s 1998 agreement with Carpet Den. In each count alleged in its complaint, Watson Carpet asserts that Mohawk “refused to sell” carpet “[pjursuant to and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” R. 1 (CompLIffl 32, 40, 48). The defendants argue that the phrase “[p]ursuant to and in furtherance of the conspiracy” is a legal conclusion, which this court “need not accept as true,”
In re Travel Agent,
The district court also found Watson Carpet’s allegations inadequate because the state-court litigation itself was “an eminently plausible reason for the refusal to deal.” R. 35 (Dist. Ct. Op. # 1 at 11 (citing
Zoslaw v. MCA Distributing Corp.,
The passage of time between an agreement and a defendant’s later actions may affect the plausibility of an inference that the actions were connected to the agreement.
Cf. In re Travel Agent,
It is not necessary for us to consider Watson Carpet’s argument that posW1998 facts confirmed the existence of a conspiracy. Because conspiracies are presumptively ongoing, the complaint plausibly alleges that Mohawk refused to sell to Watson Carpet in 2005, 2006, and 2007 as part of the original, ongoing conspiracy-
B. Whether the Settlement Release Barred the 2007 Claim against Carpet Den and McCormick
“Although the denial of a motion for summary judgment is usually an interlocutory order that is not immediately appealable,” we have jurisdiction to hear the appeal when it “is presented in tandem with a grant of summary judgment.”
Smith v. Jefferson Cnty. Bd. of Sch. Comm’rs,
Carpet Den and McCormick have cross-appealed the district court’s determination — on purely legal grounds — that the settlement release did not bar the 2007 claim. Watson Carpet concedes that the release bars the 2005 and 2006 claims against these defendants. We hold that the release does not bar the 2007 claim.
In the 2007 Settlement Agreement and Release, Watson Carpet “forever release[d] and discharge^] McCormick and Carpet Den ... from and against any and all claims, rights, assertions, demands, damages, disputes, agreements, actions and causes of action, which it may have against them whether such claims are contingent or actual, anticipated or unanticipated, and of whatever kind or nature.” Settlement at ¶ 1. The agreement is “governed by the laws of the State of Tennessee,”
id.
at ¶ 11, which provide that “[a]
*460
general release ... covers all claims between the parties which are in existence and within their contemplation at the time it is executed,”
Sherman v. Am. Water Heater Co.,
McCormick and Carpet Den argue that the release precludes Watson Carpet from using the 1998 agreement as part of any claim against these two defendants. Because the release applied to the same conspiracy that is at stake in the current lawsuit, these defendants conclude that it was not necessary for them to withdraw from the conspiracy to avoid liability for coconspirator Mohawk’s post-release actions. This reasoning is faulty because it overlooks the difference between facts and claims. Although some of its predicate facts occurred before 2007, the 2007
claim
did not exist at the time of the settlement. Because Watson Carpet was not injured from the 2007 refusal to sell until the refusal to sell occurred, the 2007 claim accrued after the parties signed the settlement and release.
See Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
Although a release could bar later claims if it also functioned as a withdrawal from the conspiracy, this particular release did not effectuate withdrawal. Defendants are liable for the acts of their coconspirators.
United States v. Brown,
To support their contrary position, McCormick and Carpet Den point us to
MCM Partners v. Andrews-Bartlett &
Assocs.,
Inc.,
We hold that a mid-conspiracy settlement does not preclude liability for a co-conspirator’s subsequent actions that further the conspiracy. Because McCormick and Carpet Den limited their liability without withdrawing from the conspiracy, the settlement release does not prevent Watson Carpet from holding them liable for Mohawk’s 2007 refusal to sell, should the evidence support the allegations that Watson Carpet has pleaded regarding Mohawk’s conduct.
III. CONCLUSION
Watson Carpet has plausibly and specifically alleged an agreement in 1998 to restrain trade as well as acts consistent with that agreement — refusals by Mohawk to sell carpet — in 2005, 2006, and 2007. Litigation between the parties might account for Mohawk’s refusals to sell to Watson Carpet, but it is also plausible that the agreement was the reason for Mohawk’s refusals. Thus, we REVERSE the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim under Twombly and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
We AFFIRM the district court’s determination that the 2007 claim against McCormick and Carpet Den was not barred by the prior settlement release because those defendants limited their liability for the earlier conspiratorial acts but they did not withdraw from the conspiracy.
Notes
. We state the facts assuming, as we must, that the allegations in the complaint are true.
See Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
. The same is true of Mohawk’s argument that it might have refused to sell because Watson Carpet inadequately supported the homebuilders.
