1994-1 Trade Cases P 70,576,
YEAGER'S FUEL, INC.; Atlantic Oil and Heating Company;
Mansfeld Fuel Oil Company; Deiter Brothers Fuel Company,
Inc.; Ralph D. Weaver, Inc.; C.A. Lessig, Inc.; Harned
Durham Oil Company, Inc.; Schwanger Brothers & Company,
Inc.; SICO Company; Withlock & Woerth, Inc.; Zongora
Fuel, Inc.; Senick, Inc.; Carlos R. Leffler, Inc.; H.
John Davis, Inc.; Arthur J. Ulrich, Inc.; Union Fuel
Company; Guy Heavener, Inc.; Desousa Oil and Service
Corp.; W.C. Reichenbach & Sons, Inc.; Apgar Oil Company,
Inc.; Freyman's Fuel Oil Company, Inc.
v.
PENNSYLVANIA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY.
LOSCH BOILER SALES AND SERVICE CO., Individually and on
Behalf of All Persons Similarly Situated
v.
PENNSYLVANIA POWER & LIGHT CO.,
Yeager's Fuel, Inc.; Atlantic Oil and Heating Company;
Mansfeld Fuel Oil Company; Deiter Brothers Fuel Company,
Inc.; Ralph D. Weaver, Inc.; C.A. Lessig, Inc.; Harned
Durham Oil Company; Schwanger Brothers and Company, Inc.;
SICO Company; Whitlock & Woerth, Inc.; Zongora Fuel, Inc.;
Senick, Inc.; Carlos R. Leffler, Inc.; H. John Davis,
Inc.; Arthur J. Ulrich, Inc.; Union Fuel Company; Guy
Heavener, Inc.; Desousa Oil and Service Corp.; W.C.
Reichenbach & Sons, Inc.; Apgar Oil Company, Inc.; and
Freyman's Fuel Oil Company, Inc.; and Losch Boiler Sales &
Service Co., individually and on behalf of all persons
similarly situated, Appellants.
No. 93-1098.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued July 21, 1993.
Decided April 26, 1994.
Sur Petition for Rehearing June 6, 1994.
David L. Pennington, Catherine P. Cox, Harvey, Pennington, Herting & Renneisen, Philadelphia, PA, for appellants.
Wayne M. Thomas (argued), Kohn, Nast & Graf, Philadelphia, PA, for appellant, Losch Boiler Sales & Service Co.
Christopher C. Fennell, Jeffrey H. Howard (argued), Crowell & Moring, Washington, DC, for appellee.
Thomas L. Welch, Office of Atty. Gen., Harrisburg, PA, for amicus-appellant, Com. of Pennsylvania.
Before: MANSMANN, GREENBERG and LEWIS, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
LEWIS, Circuit Judge.
This appeal involves two related cases that were consolidated for summary judgment disposition in the district court. In the first case, Yeager's Fuel, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co., 21 oil dealers and persons who supply related heating equipment sued Pennsylvania Power & Light Co. ("PP & L") alleging violations of sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Secs. 1, 2; section 2(c) of the Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 13(c); section 3 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 14; and section 1962(c) of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"), 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1962(c). In the second case, Losch Boiler Sales & Service Co. v. PP & L, a fuel oil company which supplies and installs heating equipment brought a class action lawsuit against PP & L alleging violations of sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act; sections 2 and 3 of the Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. Secs. 13, 13a; section 3 of the Clayton Act; and state law claims of unfair competition and civil conspiracy.
We agree with the district court that PP & L is immune from antitrust liability for offering builders and developers cash grants and other incentives, and for offering consumers a special electric rate for installation of high-efficiency electric heating systems. However, we also conclude that PP & L is not immune from antitrust liability to the extent it made these offers contingent upon "all-electric development agreements." Therefore, we will affirm the judgment of the district court except as to the plaintiffs' allegations that PP & L provided benefits to builders and developers in exchange for entry into all-electric development agreements. As to those allegations, we will reverse and remand so that the case may proceed to trial on both those claims and the Losch plaintiffs' state-law claims.
I.
Defendant/appellee PP & L is an electric utility servicing Allentown, Pennsylvania, and surrounding areas. In addition to providing the Allentown area with electricity, PP & L competes with the plaintiffs (the "Oil Dealers") and others for customers in the residential heating market in Allentown and surrounding areas. Because of the costs associated with converting from one type of home heating system to another, the most intense competition is in the new construction market. See Losch complaint ("Losch") p 22, appendix ("app.") at 1040.
According to the Oil Dealers' complaints, PP & L began promoting the use of electric heat pumps as conservation devices for use in new homes in the late 1970s. Yeager's amended complaint ("Yeager's") p 26, app. at 9. To encourage builders and developers to use electric heat pumps, PP & L offered them cash incentives for each new home in which an electric heat pump was installed. Yeager's pp 28-29, app. at 10; Losch p 15, app. at 1038; see app. at 1265-66, 4184-85. PP & L also provided builders and developers with other benefits by, for example, subsidizing developers' advertising efforts and paying for the installation of high-efficiency electric heat in model homes. See, e.g., app. at 4173, 4176. Although not specifically alleged in the Oil Dealers' complaints, PP & L apparently included in some of its incentive offers provisions such as the following:
Developer must agree that the entire development will consist of only electrically heated units during the term of this Agreement. Completion of a non-electrically heated unit shall void this Agreement and the System grants for future units in the development will revert to whatever applicable program, if any, is in effect at the time.
App. at 1265. See Yeager's p 29, app. at 10. See also app. at 4177, 4185. (We will refer to agreements containing clauses such as this as "all-electric development agreements.")1
PP & L also offered reduced electric rates for a limited time to persons purchasing "Four-Star" homes equipped with electric heat pumps and residential off-peak thermal heating ("RTS") systems.2 Yeager's p 31, app. at 11; Losch pp 18-19, app. at 1038-39. RTS systems promote load management3 by heating water during off-peak hours (times during which the demand for electricity is at the lowest) and storing it for use during peak hours (times of highest demand). PP & L offered a special rate (the "RTS Rate") to homeowners purchasing homes with these units because RTS systems are more expensive than electric baseboard heating.
The Oil Dealers allege that PP & L approached builders and developers about these programs and incentives shortly after receiving requests from them to provide electricity during construction. Losch p 15, app. at 1038. Thus, the Oil Dealers contend that PP & L is using its status as the sole provider of electricity in the Allentown area to monopolize the home heating market in that area. Losch p 25, app. at 1042. As support for this allegation, they allege that more than 70 percent of new homes constructed in the Allentown area since the early 1980s use electric heat rather than oil or other heating systems. Yeager's p 32, app. at 11; Losch p 20, app. at 1039.4
PP & L responded to the Oil Dealers' allegations in part by claiming that it was immune from antitrust liability for the challenged activities under the state action immunity doctrine. See Parker v. Brown,
II.
We need only address PP & L's state action immunity argument with respect to the RTS Rate and incentive programs which were not offered as part of all-electric development agreements, for PP & L has conceded both in its brief and at oral argument that it does not seek state action immunity for benefits provided to builders and developers pursuant to all-electric development agreements. See PP & L's brief at 41. Instead, PP & L asks us to affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment as to the alleged all-electric development agreements on the merits without resort to the immunity defense. We will first address the state action immunity issue and then turn to PP & L's arguments regarding the all-electric development agreements.
The district court had jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Secs. 1331, 1337 and 15 U.S.C. Secs. 15, 26. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291. Our review of a grant of summary judgment is plenary; we evaluate the evidence using the same standard the district court was to have applied in reaching its decision. Big Apple BMW, Inc. v. BMW of North America, Inc.,
In Parker, the Supreme Court refused to impose antitrust liability for state action because "nothing in the language of the Sherman Act or its history ... suggests that its purpose was to restrain a state or its officers or agents from activities directed by its legislature." Parker,
Although Parker did not involve private conduct, subsequent caselaw has made it clear that private entities may claim state action immunity if their challenged activity was directed and supervised by the state. E.g., Ticor II, --- U.S. ----,
A.
As a preliminary matter, we must decide whether state action immunity can shield electric utilities from antitrust liability. The Oil Dealers contend that to grant PP & L state action immunity based upon Pennsylvania's statutory scheme would be inconsistent with the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 2601 et seq. ("PURPA"). PURPA, which the Pennsylvania statutes implement, provides that nothing in it "affects ... the applicability of the antitrust laws to any electric utility." 16 U.S.C. Sec. 2603(1). The Oil Dealers thus argue that it is "totally inconsistent with PURPA to use the Pennsylvania legislation implementing [it] to exempt the utility's conduct from the antitrust laws." Oil Dealers' brief at 23. We disagree.
PURPA's plain language, which indicates that it is not intended to affect antitrust laws as they apply to utility companies, necessarily implies that both theories of liability and defenses apply with full force to utilities. Thus, we agree with the district court's holding that the fact that PURPA does not "affect the applicability" of the antitrust laws "cannot mean that PURPA reserves only antitrust liability but not antitrust defenses." Yeager's Fuel, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co.,
B.
Having concluded that PP & L may assert state action immunity in response to plaintiffs' claims, we must determine which party bears the burden of proving that the doctrine applies. The Oil Dealers argue that PP & L bears the burden because state action immunity is an affirmative defense. PP & L contends that the Oil Dealers bear the burden of showing that state action immunity does not shield the challenged activity from liability because, as plaintiffs, they bear the burden of establishing a cause of action under the antitrust laws.
In Parker, the Supreme Court treated the issue of state action immunity as one of preemption; it did not describe the doctrine as an affirmative defense. Cases since Parker, however, clarify that state action immunity is an affirmative defense as to which PP & L bears the burden of proof. See Ticor II, --- U.S. at ----,
C.
PP & L thus bears the burden of proof, and first it must demonstrate that it offered its RTS Rate to consumers, and cash grants and other incentives free of all-electric development agreements to builders and developers, pursuant to a clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed state policy. Midcal,
Contrary to the Oil Dealers' contention, a state policy need not be aimed at restraining competition for a person acting pursuant to that policy to be immune from antitrust liability. In City of Columbia v. Omni Outdoor Advertising, Inc.,
We have rejected the contention that this requirement can be met only if the delegating statute explicitly permits the displacement of competition.... It is enough, we have held, if suppression of competition is the "foreseeable result" of what the statute authorizes....
Omni,
PP & L is regulated by the Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission (the "PUC" or the "Commission"). The PUC is an independent state administrative commission authorized to regulate public utility companies doing business in Pennsylvania. See 66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Secs. 301, 501. Pursuant to its statutory authority, it has directed that utilities such as PP & L consider "conservation, load management, and alternate energy supply products" as alternatives to expanding capacity and cost-reduction measures. 52 Pa.Code Sec. 69.31. See also 52 Pa.Code Sec. 69.34. The Pennsylvania legislature requires each utility to submit annually
information concerning its future plans to meet its customer demand, including ...:
(3) A year-by-year examination of the potential for promoting and ensuring the full utilization of all practical and economical energy conservation for the next twenty years and a discussion of how existing and planned utility programs do or do not adequately reach this potential. Such programs should include, but not be limited to, educational, audit, loan, rebate, third-party financing and load management efforts to shift load from peak to off-peak periods.
66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 524(a)(3).
The Oil Dealers agree that this statutory scheme expresses a state policy in favor of energy conservation and load management but argue that the policy cannot support a claim of state action immunity because it is at best neutral as to competition. Community Communications Co., Inc. v. City of Boulder,
Neither the submission to the commission of the information required by subsection (a) or [sic] the issuance by the commission of a report on the information, or anything contained in such reports, or any action taken by the commission as a result of the issuance of such reports, shall be considered or construed as approval or acceptance by the commission of any of the plans, assumptions or calculations made by the public utility and reflected in the information submitted.
66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 524(d). Thus, the Oil Dealers argue that Pennsylvania's statutory scheme does nothing more than authorize PP & L's allegedly anticompetitive activity. If that were the case, PP & L would not be immune from liability for its actions. Omni,
State approval of PP & L's activity is not required for immunity to attach, however. Southern Motor Carriers,
The Oil Dealers respond that PP & L's practices do not represent attempts to engage in energy conservation or load-shifting. Therefore, they argue, even if Pennsylvania's statutory scheme reasonably contemplates anticompetitive effects flowing from rebates and loans offered to further energy conservation and load management, PP & L cannot be immune from liability for engaging in the challenged activities. They contend that the district court engaged in fact-finding--which, of course, would be impermissible at the summary judgment stage--when it ruled that PP & L's activities represented energy conservation or load-shifting efforts.
In so arguing, the Oil Dealers misconstrue the court's function when deciding whether a practice was established pursuant to a state policy. The district court did not engage in fact-finding; rather, in recognizing that state law governs the issue whether Pennsylvania has articulated a state policy favoring PP & L's activities, it merely attempted to predict how the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would rule on that issue by examining and giving deference to PUC findings. See Yeager's Fuel,
The PUC's Bureau of Conservation, Economics & Energy Planning (the "Bureau"), in response to inquiries from state legislators and outcry from the petroleum industry, examined PP & L's programs in 1989. In an internal report, the Bureau found that PP & L's offering of certain incentives to owners and builders to install high-efficiency electric heating systems in new homes was a legitimate load management program. App. at 1811-12.9
The Oil Dealers argue that we should not consider the views of a bureau of a state commission to determine state policy. In Pennsylvania, the PUC has been entrusted with "full power and authority ... to enforce, execute and carry out, by its regulations, orders, or otherwise, ... the provisions of [the Code] and the full intent thereof." 66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 501(a). The PUC has the authority to evaluate the prudence and cost-effectiveness of utilities' energy conservation and load management programs. 66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 1319. Clearly, we may accord the PUC's views weight. See Ticor I,
The Bureau, of course, is one step removed from the PUC. The legislature itself, however, in addition to charging the Bureau with conducting studies and research and advising the PUC, has charged the Bureau with "the development of an effective program of energy conservation." 66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Sec. 308(c). In an audit of the PUC, the legislature recognized that the Bureau in part "reviews company plans for new conservation programs and provides feedback to utilities on improvements for program design." App. at 2660. Therefore, it would appear that the Bureau, even though only a PUC bureau, is the authority on Pennsylvania's conservation policy. We will accord weight to its view that PP & L's programs were legitimate load management programs. Our decision to do so, in turn, requires the conclusion that PP & L engaged in the challenged activities in accordance with a clearly articulated state policy promoting load management.
We likewise reject the Oil Dealers' argument that we should not consider the Bureau report as an indication of state policy because it is only an "informal opinion." The PUC's Rules of Administrative Practice and Procedure provide that "informal opinions, whether oral or written, expressed by Commissioners, presiding officers, legal counsel, employe[e]s or representatives of the Commission are only considered as aids to the public, do not have the force and effect of law or legal determinations, and are not binding upon the Commonwealth or the Commission." 52 Pa.Code Sec. 1.96. This provision does not appear to apply to the Bureau's report, even if it is purely internal, for the report does not constitute an "opinion" in the sense the term is used in the rule. In any event, the rule certainly does not undermine the fact that the Bureau, which in Pennsylvania is charged with overseeing utilities' energy conservation efforts, believed that PP & L's programs, at least insofar as they did not involve all-electric development agreements, were undertaken in accordance with state conservation policy.
Since the district court's decision, the PUC has adopted new regulations which tend to discredit the Bureau's view of PP & L's activity. The PUC now requires that any demand-side management activity on the part of a utility company be approved prior to implementation. App. at 4683, 4693. It also now prohibits the use of cash to influence builders and developers. 52 Pa.Code Sec. 57.63; see app. at 4688 (commenting that, under the new regulations, "utilities are specifically prohibited from delivery of allowances such as cash or appliances to builders and developers in order to influence their choice of energy for use in new residential developments").
The fact that the PUC now prohibits such actions does not mean that PP & L should be denied state action immunity for its past activity, however. As we recognized in Ticor I, a private defendant reasonably relying on apparently lawful government action should not be deprived of state action immunity if the government later reverses its position. Ticor I,
We now turn to the Oil Dealers' argument that according PP & L state action immunity in this case would be inconsistent with the Supreme Court's decision in Cantor. Leaving aside questions regarding the continued viability of Cantor's holding, see Yeager's Fuel,
In Cantor, a retail druggist who sold light bulbs alleged that the Detroit Edison Company ("Detroit Edison") was using its monopoly power as a provider of electricity to restrain competition in the sale of light bulbs. Cantor,
Although the case was decided before the Court clearly delineated its two-pronged test for state action immunity, the Cantor Court in essence ruled that Michigan had not clearly articulated a policy encompassing the light bulb program. See Cantor,
In contrast, in this case, Pennsylvania statutes expressly provide for PUC regulation of rates, foresee the establishment of rebate and load management programs and authorize the PUC to evaluate such programs. The PUC has approved the RTS Rate and, acting through the Bureau, has investigated PP & L's rebate and incentive programs. Other utilities have similarly offered special rates to consumers, app. at 229-329, and may even have offered incentives to builders or developers. See, e.g., app. at 272, 285, 300, 307. Cantor does not compel a different conclusion from the one we reach here.
For all of these reasons, we think it is clear that PP & L offered its RTS Rate, cash grants and other incentives which were not part of all-electric development agreements pursuant to a clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed state policy of promoting load management and energy conservation.
D.
Second, PP & L must demonstrate that Pennsylvania actively supervised its incentive programs and RTS Rate. "Actual state involvement, not deference to private [anticompetitive activity] under the general auspices of state law, is the precondition for immunity from federal law. Immunity is conferred out of respect for ongoing regulation by the State, not out of respect for the economics of [the challenged activity]." Ticor II, --- U.S. at ---- - ----,
Ticor involved title insurance rates which were set by ratesetting bureaus which, in turn, were comprised of member title insurance companies. Faced with an antitrust challenge, the insurance companies argued that their ratesetting action was immune because of their states' regulatory schemes, pursuant to which state commissions had "approved" the rates set by the bureaus by not rejecting them within a certain period of time. The Court explained:
Our decisions make clear that the purpose of the active supervision inquiry is not to determine whether the State has met some normative standard, such as efficiency, in its regulatory practices. Its purpose is to determine whether the State has exercised sufficient independent judgment and control so that the details of the rates or prices have been established as a product of deliberate state intervention, not simply by agreement among private parties. Much as in causation inquiries, the analysis asks whether the State has played a substantial role in determining the specifics of the economic policy. The question is not how well state regulation works but whether the anticompetitive scheme is the State's own.
Ticor II, --- U.S. at ----,
The PUC unquestionably has the power to review PP & L's programs. 66 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. Secs. 501, 1309(a). Therefore, we need only consider whether it actually did so in a manner which satisfies the Ticor test. Such an analysis is best understood by separately examining the challenged activities. We will first consider the RTS Rate.
1.
The PUC has actually approved PP & L's RTS Rate in the tariffs PP & L must file under state law. App. at 705-35; Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission v. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co.,
Clearly, Pennsylvania has actively supervised the RTS Rate. Cf. DFW Metro Line Services v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Corp.,
2.
Next, we will consider whether Pennsylvania has actively supervised PP & L's offering cash grants and other incentives to builders and developers insofar as those incentives were not part of all-electric development agreements. On this issue, PP & L makes much of the fact that, as required by statute, it annually has described its Four-Star Home program to the PUC through the Bureau. This reporting alone does not indicate active supervision because the Bureau does no more than review the reports. Cf. Ticor II, --- U.S. at ----,
It is nevertheless clear that the Bureau has considered these programs more extensively than simply reviewing PP & L's reports upon submission. As explained previously, in November, 1989, the Bureau issued a final staff report reviewing PP & L's programs in response to inquiries from the legislature and protests by fossil fuel dealers. In the report, it indicated that it believed that PP & L's programs constituted valid energy conservation and load management efforts. App. at 1810 et seq. See also app. at 1765. We do not view the PUC's refusal to release this report as affecting whether we should accord it weight.
It is also clear that the PUC was aware that PP & L's programs involved not just incentives to homeowners themselves but incentives to builders and developers as well. See, e.g., app. at 351, 362, 366. See also Pennsylvania's amicus brief at 4. Through the Bureau, the PUC also knew that PP & L's programs not only shifted current use of electricity but also attracted new electrical heating accounts. App. at 1811.
Further, as noted previously, the PUC has issued new regulations governing programs such as PP & L's. These regulations were the result of meetings and planning sessions which were themselves an outgrowth of the Oil Dealers' having voiced the same complaints to the PUC as they have asserted in this lawsuit. App. at 98-103, 361-66. The Oil Dealers have even commented on the proposed regulations which are now in effect. See app. at 339, 4681-88. Thus, the PUC heard and presumably considered the Oil Dealers' allegations but, until issuing its new regulations, considered PP & L's programs (insofar as they did not include all-electric development agreements) to be valid attempts to engage in energy conservation as the legislature required. Therefore, we conclude that PP & L is immune from antitrust liability for those programs, for they have been actively supervised.
III.
As noted previously, PP & L does not claim to be immune from antitrust liability for actions undertaken in connection with all-electric development agreements. It thus urges us to examine the merits of the Oil Dealers' claims regarding incentives offered in conjunction with all-electric development agreements. PP & L asks that we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment on those claims because the Oil Dealers have not advanced evidence to support them; however, a review of the procedural history of this case helps explain our disinclination to do so.
The Yeager's plaintiffs filed suit on August 12, 1991; the plaintiffs in Losch did not file suit until April 22, 1992. By that time, there had been a great deal of activity in the Yeager's case.
Specifically, in November, 1991, PP & L had moved for dismissal of the Yeager's case under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), arguing both state action immunity and failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Attached to its motion were various documents offered in support of its state action immunity defense. Because it would be considering matters outside the pleadings in deciding that motion, the district court in January, 1992, ordered that PP & L's motion to dismiss be treated as a motion for summary judgment, permitted some discovery and granted the Yeager's plaintiffs additional time to reply.
In April, 1992, however, apparently for administrative reasons, the district court dismissed PP & L's pending motion to dismiss without prejudice to its being refiled as a motion for summary judgment. PP & L did just that, filing a motion for summary judgment which relied solely on the reasons set forth in its previous motion, appendix and brief. Although PP & L finally argued in its reply brief that the Yeager's plaintiffs had not produced sufficient evidence to support their claims, rather than that they had simply failed to allege claims upon which relief could be granted, the district court denied both the Yeager's plaintiffs' motion to respond to that reply and their request for additional discovery under Rule 56(f) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
After the Losch complaint was filed, the plaintiff in Losch moved to consolidate the two cases for pretrial purposes. The court held a hearing, at which the scope of PP & L's summary judgment motion was discussed. The district court did not explicitly decide whether PP & L's challenge to the merits of the Oil Dealers' claims would be considered under a Rule 12(b)(6) or a Rule 56 standard. It did, however, grant the Losch plaintiff's motion to consolidate "the state action immunity issue and all federal claims ... asserted in either the Yeager's or Losch cases." App. at 2457.
The confusion as to how the court would treat PP & L's arguments on the merits of the Oil Dealers' claims--that is, whether it would consider only the sufficiency of their averments, or determine whether they had produced evidence sufficient to survive summary judgment--continued through the argument on PP & L's motion. At that argument, the district court stated that a Rule 56 standard would apply, app. at 106-11, but in its opinion, the court ruled that it need not address the issue of which standard it should use to address the merits because it would grant summary judgment entirely on state action immunity grounds. See Yeager's Fuel,
Relying upon Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Of course, a party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of 'the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,' which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Id. at 323,
Furthermore, even if PP & L had argued insufficiency of the evidence on the merits earlier, the Oil Dealers had a right not to be " 'railroaded' by a premature motion for summary judgment." Id. at 326,
In light of the confusion surrounding PP & L's arguments on the merits before the district court, and because the Oil Dealers may not have had the opportunity for full discovery and argument with respect to the merits, we will decline at this time to entertain PP & L's arguments that the Oil Dealers have failed to produce sufficient evidence to survive summary judgment on the merits of their remaining claims. Cf. J.F. Feeser, Inc. v. Serv-A-Portion, Inc.,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment to PP & L as to the Oil Dealers' claims based upon the RTS Rate and incentives which were not offered in conjunction with all-electric development agreements. We will reverse the district court's judgment insofar as it granted summary judgment to PP & L for incentives offered in conjunction with such agreements, however. Because this partial reversal reintroduces federal claims into each of the Losch and the Yeager's cases, we will also reverse the district court's dismissal of the Losch state-law claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1367(c).
SUR PETITION FOR REHEARING
June 6, 1994
PRESENT: MANSMANN, GREENBERG and LEWIS, Circuit Judges.
The petition for panel rehearing filed by the appellants in the above entitled case having been submitted to the judges who participated in the decision of this court, and no judge who concurred in the decision having asked for rehearing, the petition for panel rehearing is denied.
Notes
Significantly, these agreements require only that all units in the development use electric heat, not that they utilize high-efficiency electric heating systems. Thus, while a builder or developer would not receive a grant for a home using less efficient electric baseboard heating, it would not lose potential grants for other homes in the development by building such a home. Through these agreements then, PP & L made a unit containing inefficient electric baseboard heating preferable to a unit using efficient gas or oil heating systems. The agreements would assist in efforts to "block the entry of fossil fuels, especially gas, into new developments." App. at 1624; see also app. at 4156
It is unclear whether, as alleged in the complaints, a home had to use a high-efficiency heat pump to be designated as a Four-Star home. From the record, it appears that to qualify as a Four-Star home, and thus to receive the reduced rate, a home had to contain an RTS system and energy-efficient appliances. See app. at 1288-89, 3967
Load management is the practice of shifting energy demand, or "load," from peak daytime hours (during which there is usually the most demand) to nighttime (off-peak) hours. App. at 172. By shifting the demand on their generation facilities to off-peak times, electric companies can avoid having to increase their generating capacity to serve all their customers
In their brief on appeal, the Oil Dealers also challenge a fourth PP & L practice--a fossil fuel conversion program pursuant to which PP & L offers cash grants to contractors and homeowners if they replace fossil fuel heating systems with electric heating systems. While the record contains documents to support this allegation, neither the district court's opinion nor either complaint refers to this practice. See Yeager's Fuel, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co.,
The court also dismissed the Yeager's plaintiffs' RICO claim for failure to state a claim and the Losch state-law claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1367(c)(3) because no federal-law claims remained in the case. The Oil Dealers do not challenge the district court's disposition of the RICO claim on appeal; our disposition of the antitrust claims will result in reversal of the district court's dismissal of the state-law claims in Losch
All citations to Ticor I will be to portions which were not reversed by the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court in Parker thus first articulated the state action immunity doctrine after consulting the text and history of the Sherman Act. Parker v. Brown,
Omni and Hallie involved immunity of municipalities under the state action immunity doctrine, but the test to be applied in determining whether a state policy can support a claim of immunity is the same for municipalities as it is for private actors. The distinction between the two types of cases lies in the fact that private actors, unlike municipalities, must prove a second proposition--that their actions were actively supervised by the state--to obtain immunity for their actions. See Town of Hallie v. City of Eau Claire,
PP & L apparently did not mention to the Bureau or the PUC that some of these benefits were provided pursuant to all-electric development agreements. See Pennsylvania's amicus brief at 5. Because PP & L does not here contend that benefits given to builders and developers as part of all-electric development agreements merit state action immunity, we need only examine the Bureau's findings as to benefits provided in the absence of such agreements. Therefore, since we are not according immunity to PP & L for activity which may not have been revealed or which may have been misrepresented to the Bureau and the PUC, there is no need either to decide whether PP & L actually misrepresented or omitted certain information when describing its activity to the PUC, or to consider the Oil Dealers' argument that a defendant may not be accorded state action immunity when it has engaged in "predation by abuse of governmental process." Cf. Bork, The Antitrust Paradox at 349-51
