Tri-State v. Waste ( 1993 )


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  • UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 92-2218
    TRI-STATE RUBBISH, INC., ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    WASTE MANAGEMENT, INC., ET AL.,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    Torruella and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
    Ralph A. Dyer for appellants.
    Michael A. Nelson with  whom Emily A. Bloch, Nicholas S. Nadzo and
    Jensen  Baird Gardner  & Henry  were on  brief for  appellee Mid-Maine
    Waste Action Corp.
    Robert S.  Frank with whom  Carl E. Kandutsch  and Verrill &  Dana
    were on brief  for appellees Waste Management,  Inc., Waste Management
    of Maine,  Inc., Consolidated  Waste Services,  Inc. and  Consolidated
    Waste Transport, Inc.
    John  J. Wall,  III with  whom Thomas  F. Monaghan  and  Monaghan,
    Leahy, Hochadel & Libby were on brief for appellee City of Auburn.
    July 13, 1993
    BOUDIN,  Circuit  Judge.   The  complaint  in  this case
    charged that a  number of entities, public  and private, were
    seeking  to  monopolize  the  waste  disposal   business  and
    otherwise acting in violation of  federal and state law.  The
    district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a
    claim.  We affirm the district court with one  exception:  as
    to the predation claims against the private defendants, we do
    not think  that state  action immunity has  been made  out on
    this  record, and therefore  remand those claims  for further
    proceedings.
    I.  THE BACKGROUND
    This case  is one  of several in  which state  and local
    communities  have taken  measures to  cope  with their  waste
    collection responsibilities,  and private  haulers have  been
    adversely affected and  responded with antitrust suits.   The
    cases vary,  and in this one  the history is tangled  and the
    claims  numerous.    In describing  the  facts,  we  take the
    allegations  of  the complaint  as true,  as is  customary in
    reviewing dismissals  for  failure to  state  a claim.    See
    Watterson v. Page, 
    987 F.2d 1
    , 3 (1st Cir. 1993).
    Maine  has in force statutes that give local communities
    substantial  authority   over  local  waste   collection  and
    disposal.    Under  this legislative  umbrella,  the  City of
    Auburn and eleven  other municipalities formed in 1986 a non-
    profit, non-stock  corporation to assist  in waste  disposal.
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    The entity--Mid-Maine Waste Action Corporation ("MMWAC")--was
    then mandated to construct a facility to burn municipal waste
    and derive electricity from the process.  Maine law expressly
    authorizes  municipalities to  cooperate  in   waste disposal
    projects, Me. Rev.  Stat. Ann. tit. 38,    2201, and provides
    for interlocal agreements to  organize public waste  disposal
    corporations to own or operate facilities.  
    Id.
       1304-B(5).
    MMWAC issued  over $42 million  in bonds to  construct a
    waste-to-energy  facility.   The  bonds  were  to  be  funded
    through  so-called  "tipping  fees," customarily  charged  to
    those who  dispose of waste  at a landfill or  other disposal
    facility,  and  through the  revenues  from the  sale  of the
    electricity.   To  secure  the quantity  of  waste needed  to
    operate  the  facility  economically--that   is,  at  a  high
    percentage of its capacity--the  MMWAC municipalities enacted
    flow control ordinances.  These local laws, authorized by Me.
    Rev. Stat. Ann. tit.  38,   1304-B(2), required the  delivery
    of  all solid  waste generated  within  each municipality  to
    MMWAC.    Each  municipality also  contracted  with  MMWAC to
    deliver to  it the  solid waste  generated in  the community,
    paying MMWAC  whatever tipping  fee was  required to  produce
    revenues to service its debt.
    Because the  MMWAC incinerator-generator  facility would
    not be ready before 1992,  MMWAC provided in the meantime for
    an alternative method of disposing of the  waste it received.
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    For  this interim period,  MMWAC contracted with  two related
    entities, Consolidated Waste Services and Consolidated  Waste
    Transportation (collectively,  "the Consolidated  companies")
    to operate  a transfer  station near  the MMWAC  construction
    site.   A  transfer station  is a  collection point  at which
    waste may be processed or repackaged before being sent to its
    final  destination.   MMWAC agreed  to  pay the  Consolidated
    companies $66 per  ton to receive the waste  delivered and to
    dispose of the waste until the MMWAC incinerator was ready to
    operate.
    MMWAC's initial tipping fee was set at  $75 per ton.  It
    is common in  waste collection for municipalities  to collect
    residential trash themselves or to contract out this function
    but  to require  commercial businesses  to contract  directly
    with  private haulers  for  their  trash removal  facilities.
    Under the municipalities' agreements with MMWAC and under the
    local flow control  ordinances, private trash haulers  in the
    twelve municipalities and the  municipalities themselves were
    effectively required to  deliver their trash to  the transfer
    station and pay the $75 per ton tipping fee to MMWAC.
    Waste  Management   of  Maine,  Inc.  is   an  operating
    subsidiary  of Waste  Management, Inc.,  one  of the  largest
    waste  collection and  disposal  firms in  the  nation.   The
    operating  subsidiary  provides trash  collection  in various
    Maine  towns.    In  July 1990,  after  the  transfer station
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    agreement between  MMWAC and the two  Consolidated companies,
    Waste  Management,   Inc.  acquired   the  two   Consolidated
    companies; and one of the two may thereafter have been merged
    into  Waste  Management of  Maine.    We  refer to  all  four
    companies, collectively, as "Waste Management."
    Tri-State   Rubbish,   Inc.,  a   competitor   of  Waste
    Management  of Maine, is  also in the  business of collecting
    and disposing of commercial  trash, including waste generated
    by various  customers in  Auburn.   Its affiliate,  Recycling
    Unlimited Services Corp., Inc., processes waste  and recovers
    from it recyclable  commodities.  Gary Hart  is the principal
    in both  businesses.  In 1990, Tri-State  Rubbish declined to
    deliver to the Consolidated transfer station all of the waste
    collected  by   Tri-State  Rubbish  in  Auburn.     Tri-State
    Rubbish's  position was that waste capable of having recycled
    commodities  extracted from it  was not covered  by the local
    flow control ordinance.
    Auburn brought suit against Tri-State Rubbish in a Maine
    state trial court in December 1990 to enjoin it from refusing
    to deliver all  of its Auburn waste to  the transfer station.
    In  July   1992,  the  court  rejected   Tri-State  Rubbish's
    interpretation  of Maine  law and  granted  an injunction  in
    favor of Auburn.  City  of Auburn v. Tri-State Rubbish, Inc.,
    No.  CV-90-561 (Me. Sup.  Ct., Androscoggin County,  July 20,
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    1992).  That case, we are told, is now on appeal to the Maine
    Supreme Judicial Court.
    MMWAC's incinerator-generator  began operating  in early
    1992 and almost  at once MMWAC found that  the waste produced
    in the twelve  municipalities was not enough to  keep the new
    facility operating  at an optimal  level.  This led  MMWAC to
    seek additional waste from outside  the member towns; it  did
    so  by  offering  a reduced  tipping  fee,  allegedly  $45 to
    municipalities who  were not members  of MMWAC and as  low as
    $28 to Waste Management of Maine for its delivery to MMWAC of
    waste  collected  outside  the  twelve  communities.    These
    reduced fees were not made available to Tri-State Rubbish.
    In   September   1992,  Tri-State   Rubbish,   Recycling
    Unlimited, and  Hart  (collectively  "Tri-State")  began  the
    present suit in  federal district court.  The defendants were
    Auburn, MMWAC, and the four Waste Management companies: Waste
    Management,  Inc., Waste  Management of  Maine,  and the  two
    Consolidated companies.  Based on the events described above,
    the  complaint asserted federal and state antitrust claims, a
    claim  of tortious  interference (by  Waste  Management) with
    Tri-State's contractual relations, and claimed violations (by
    Auburn)  of 42  U.S.C.     1983 and  provisions  of the  U.S.
    Constitution.
    The defendants in  this federal action moved  to dismiss
    the complaint under  Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6)  for failure to
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    state a claim upon which relief may be granted.  The district
    court  granted  the motions,  concluding  that  the antitrust
    claims  were barred by so-called "state action" immunity; the
    bases for dismissing  the other claims are  more conveniently
    described  below as the separate claims  are discussed.  Tri-
    State  Rubbish, Inc. v. Waste  Management, Inc., 
    803 F. Supp. 451
     (D. Me. 1992).  This appeal followed.1
    II.  THE FEDERAL ANTITRUST CLAIMS
    A  half century  ago the  Supreme  Court determined,  in
    Parker v. Brown,  
    317 U.S. 341
     (1943), that  Congress had not
    intended  the  federal  antitrust  laws  to  apply  to  trade
    restraints  or  monopolies  imposed   by  state  governments.
    Although the antitrust  laws aim at competitive  markets, the
    Court in  Parker recognized  that governments  often restrict
    competition  for public  purposes.    The  actions  of  state
    governments, no  less than  those of  the federal  government
    itself, were deemed not to fall within the constraints of the
    antitrust laws.
    After  a certain  amount  of  wobbling,  it  has  become
    settled  that municipalities  enjoy  the  protection  of  the
    Parker doctrine if,  but only if, the conduct  in question is
    1Although both sides have captioned their briefs to show
    "Tri-State  Rubbish,   Inc.,  et  al."  as   the  plaintiffs-
    appellants,   the  notice  of  appeal  names  only  Tri-State
    Rubbish,  Inc.  as the  appellant.    Our  caption and  other
    references  to  Hart  and  Recycling  Unlimited  are  without
    prejudice to  any consequences that  may flow on  remand from
    the way the notice of appeal was framed.
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    of  a kind  authorized or  directed  by state  law.   Town of
    Hallie v. City of Eau  Claire, 
    471 U.S. 34
     (1985); Fisichelli
    v. Town of Methuen, 
    956 F.2d 12
      (1st Cir. 1992).  In general
    this immunity is not defeated by claims that the municipality
    "conspired" with  a private party,  City of Columbia  v. Omni
    Outdoor Advertising, Inc.,  
    111 S. Ct. 1344
     (1991), or  that
    the   municipality  made   some   error   under  local   law.
    Fisichelli, 
    956 F.2d at 14
    .
    Count  I.    In  count  I of  its  complaint,  Tri-State
    contends that in  violation of the Sherman Act,  15 U.S.C.
    1-2, Auburn and MMWAC have  sought to monopolize and restrain
    trade in the waste disposal  business in Auburn and the other
    eleven municipalities.  The gist  of the claim, as elaborated
    in  Tri-State's brief, is simple: under the local ordinances,
    all solid waste  generated in the twelve  municipalities must
    be turned  over to  MMWAC or  its designee.   Thus  the waste
    disposal business  in these  locations, including  recyclable
    materials, is within the sway of one entity, MMWAC.
    With  a couple of caveats, Tri-State concedes that state
    action  immunity is  available as  to  count I  if the  Maine
    legislature  empowered  municipalities to  engross  all solid
    waste including waste that might  be recycled.  But it argues
    that Maine's policy is to promote the recovery  of recyclable
    commodities  from  waste  before the  residue  is  burned for
    electricity.  It derives this priority from  a declaration of
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    policy  in the Maine statute preceding the specific grants of
    authority.  Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 38,   1302, para. 2.  It
    urges  us to  read  the  Maine  legislation to  exclude  such
    recyclable   waste  from   the   authorization  that   allows
    municipalities to control the disposition of solid waste.
    The Maine statute explicitly  permits a municipality  to
    require that "solid waste" generated within its boundaries be
    delivered to "a designated disposal or reclamation facility,"
    
    id.
         1304-B(2),  reclamation  includes the  generation  of
    electricity,  
    id.,
      and  solid waste  is  defined  to include
    "useless, unwanted or discarded solid material."  
    Id.
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    C(29).   The statutory definition  of solid waste goes  on to
    say that "[t]he fact that a solid waste or constituent of the
    waste may have value or other use or may be sold or exchanged
    does not exclude it from this definition."   
    Id.
       This final
    clause pretty much disposes of Tri-State's argument.
    Statutes or ordinances similar to those involved in this
    case exist elsewhere.   Tri-State  cites us  to several  that
    have  been construed not to reach waste from which recyclable
    commodities could  be extracted.   Yet the  case on  which it
    principally  relies  concerned  an  authorizing statute  that
    excluded recyclables.2  By  contrast, the definitional phrase
    2In Waste Management of the Desert, Inc. v. Palm Springs
    Recycling Center,  Inc., 
    11 Cal. Rptr. 2d 676
     (Cal.  App.),
    petition for review  granted, 
    13 Cal. Rptr. 2d 850
    , 
    840 F.2d 955
      (1992), the  California statute  reserved  the right  of
    anyone "to  donate, sell or  otherwise dispose of his  or her
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    in  the  Maine  statute  (quoted  at  the  end  of  the  last
    paragraph) explicitly includes recyclables in  the waste that
    is  subject to  municipal  control.    The  district  court's
    reading of the Maine statute  follows its plain language, 
    803 F. Supp. at 456
    , and comports with the reading  of the Maine
    state court in the injunction action against Tri-State.  City
    of Auburn,  supra.  We see  no error in  the district court's
    interpretation.
    Tri-State also objects  to the  district court's  ruling
    that  MMWAC should  be treated  as  a municipality  for state
    action purposes.  As a private actor, Tri-State argues, MMWAC
    must show that it is subject to state supervision pursuant to
    California Retail  Liquor Dealers  Ass'n v. Midcal  Aluminum,
    Inc.,  
    445 U.S. 97
     (1980).   Midcal, building upon statements
    in  Parker  and later  cases,  made clear  that  state action
    immunity  will extend to  private actors only  where they are
    subject  to adequate  official supervision.    The state,  in
    other  words, may  take  anticompetitive measures  itself  or
    authorize its municipalities to do so; but it may not license
    private restraints  unless the private parties are themselves
    regulated.
    Passing the  question whether the conduct  challenged in
    count I is that of  MMWAC (as opposed to the municipalities),
    recyclable  materials" and of any private company to contract
    with a private  waste hauler to remove  segregated recyclable
    materials.  11 Cal. Rptr. at 683-84.
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    we think that  MMWAC's status is that of  the municipalities.
    MMWAC's  mission,  waste disposal,  is  a  traditional local-
    government  function.  By  statute MMWAC's directors  must be
    elected by  municipal officers and  are themselves  municipal
    officers. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 38,   1304-B(5).  The full
    faith and credit of the  municipalities may be pledged in aid
    of its  operations.  Id.   Patently MMWAC is  the creature of
    its  member  municipalities  and enjoys  their  status.   See
    Interface Group, Inc.  v. Massachusetts  Port Authority,  
    816 F.2d 9
    , 13 (1st Cir. 1987).3
    Counts II, III  and III-A.  These  counts, which include
    Tri-State's  remaining  federal antitrust  claims,  present a
    different  set  of  issues.   In  count  II  Tri-State  first
    challenged   as   a   restraint  of   trade   and   attempted
    monopolization   the   agreement   between   MMWAC  and   the
    Consolidated  companies.   As a  consequence  of the  interim
    arrangements,   Tri-State  argues that  Waste  Management  of
    Maine was able  to offer "predatory"  prices to customers  in
    Auburn  and other MMWAC municipalities.  In Tri-State's view,
    the  $66  per  ton  payment  by  MMWAC  to  the  Consolidated
    companies  for disposing of the waste allowed their affiliate
    3The   only  participants  named  in  count  I  are  the
    municipalities  and MMWAC.  Since their conduct is authorized
    by  statute, the state action doctrine  applies.  Contrary to
    Tri-State's     claim,      municipalities     (or      their
    instrumentalities)  engaged in  state-authorized conduct  are
    not  themselves  required  to be  further  supervised  by the
    state.  See Town of Hallie, 
    471 U.S. at 47
    .
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    Waste Management of  Maine effectively to reduce its  $75 per
    ton tipping fee to $9 ($75 less $66) and thus steal away Tri-
    State's customers.4
    Counts III  and III-A  concern the  activities of  Waste
    Management of  Maine in  other non-MMWAC  communities.   This
    competitor, says Tri-State,  has been favored by MMWAC with a
    low  tipping fee ($24  per ton), not  available to Tri-State,
    for  "foreign"   waste  delivered  from  outside   the  MMWAC
    municipalities  to  the  new  incinerator-generator.5   As  a
    result,  Tri-State  has  lost  customers  outside the  twelve
    municipalities  to "low ball" prices.  Further, the customers
    are "lock[ed] up" by exclusive dealing contracts and supplied
    with  trash  containers  that  can be  used  only  for  Waste
    Management trash.
    In   analyzing   these   claims,   the  district   court
    distinguished   between  MMWAC   and  the   Waste  Management
    companies.  As to the former, the court pointed  out that the
    participating  municipalities  were  empowered  by the  Maine
    4Tri-State's assertion of a $9 per ton "net" tipping fee
    appears to be faulty  economics.  The $66 per ton  payment to
    the Consolidated companies was to cover the cost of receiving
    and disposing of the  waste.  Whether or not the  cost to the
    Consolidated companies  was actually $66  per ton, it  is not
    likely to have been zero.
    5The record does not explain why, given MMWAC's need for
    fuel, it would make sense for MMWAC to offer the  $24 tipping
    fee  exclusively  to Waste  Management  of Maine.    While we
    accept the allegation as true for purposes of this appeal, we
    note that MMWAC's brief denies that this is what happened.
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    statute to control completely  the collection and disposition
    of  waste generated within their communities, dealing if they
    chose to do so  with a single entity.   
    803 F. Supp. at 458
    ;
    Me. Rev.  Stat. Ann.  tit. 38,    1304-B(4).   Thus, assuming
    that  MMWAC's  interim  arrangements  with  the  Consolidated
    companies favored  the Waste  Management companies over  Tri-
    State, MMWAC was protected by the state action doctrine.
    As to the conduct in  Counts III and III-A, the district
    court noted that  the Maine legislature clearly  contemplated
    that municipalities could buy waste from other municipalities
    to  make up  any shortfall.   
    803 F. Supp. at 459
    ;  Me. Rev.
    Stat. Ann. tit. 38,    1304-B(4-A)(B).  A reduced tipping fee
    is merely one  way of  "buying" such waste.   Nothing in  the
    authorizing statute says that the same price must  be offered
    to  everyone; on  the contrary  the need  for  long-term fuel
    commitments,  recognized  elsewhere in  the statute,  see Me.
    Rev.  Stat.  Ann.   tit.  38,     1304-B(4),   suggests  that
    arrangements  with one  or  a  few  suppliers  were  entirely
    foreseeable.  We  agree with the district court  that MMWAC's
    alleged  exclusive offer  of  the $24  tipping  fee to  Waste
    Management  of  Maine  for foreign  waste  was  authorized by
    statute and is protected by the state action doctrine.
    A different, and  more difficult, issue is  presented by
    Waste  Management's claim  that it  too is  protected  by the
    state  action   doctrine.    Tri-State   objects  that  Waste
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    Management,   at  least,  is  fully  subject  to  the  Midcal
    requirement that it  be supervised before any  of its actions
    can be protected.  The district court agreed that supervision
    is  required.   But it  found that  municipal, as  opposed to
    state, supervision is sufficient.  It further held  that this
    obligation was satisfied by MMWAC's obligation, undertaken in
    its contracts with  its municipality members, to  comply with
    all pertinent laws.  
    803 F. Supp. at 461
    .
    We  agree with the  district court's view,  supported by
    the  greater weight of  authority, that municipal supervision
    of private actors is adequate where authorized by or implicit
    in the  state legislation.  Although there  is some precedent
    to  the contrary,6 we share the view  of the Eighth and Ninth
    Circuits, endorsed  by the  leading antitrust  treatise, that
    municipal  supervision is  adequate.7   As Professors  Areeda
    and Hovenkamp note,  "it would be implausible to  rule that a
    city may regulate, say, taxi rates but only if a state agency
    also  supervises the private taxi operators."  Antitrust Law,
    supra n.7, at 197.
    6See,  e.g.,  Riverview   Investments,  Inc.  v.  Ottawa
    Community Improvement Corp., 
    774 F.2d 162
     (6th Cir. 1985).
    7Gold Cross Ambulance & Transfer v. City of Kansas City,
    
    705 F.2d 1005
     (8th Cir.  1983), cert. denied, 
    471 U.S. 1003
    (1985); Tom Hudson & Assocs. v. City of Chula Vista, 
    746 F.2d 1370
     (9th  Cir. 1984),  cert. denied, 
    472 U.S. 1028
      (1985);
    Savage  v. Waste Management, Inc.,  
    623 F. Supp. 1505
     (D.S.C.
    1985); see  also P.  Areeda & H.  Hovenkamp, Antitrust  Law
    212.7c at 196-97 (Supp. 1992).
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    At  this  point,  our  analysis  of  Waste  Management's
    position diverges somewhat  from that of the  district court.
    As  to any  claim that  Waste  Management received  favorable
    tipping   fees--whether  through   MMWAC   payments  to   the
    Consolidated  companies or  outright as to  foreign waste--we
    think  "supervision" is not a  requirement at all: the choice
    to make such payments was  that of MMWAC and its  actions are
    protected as state action.  To treat the mere receipt of such
    authorized payments as  wrongful would  undermine the  Parker
    protection  afforded MMWAC  and mistake  the  purpose of  the
    supervision requirement, which is to prevent the  unregulated
    licensing of private anticompetitive conduct.
    This analysis disposes of the claims under counts II and
    III  against  all  parties  including  the  Waste  Management
    defendants,  so far  as  those  claims  attack  the  official
    actions  of  MMWAC:    the  contract  between MMWAC  and  the
    Consolidated companies,  the  payments  to  the  Consolidated
    companies by  MMWAC, and  the tipping fees  set by  MMWAC for
    Waste  Management  of  Maine, whether  for  local  or foreign
    waste.  It does not,  however, resolve the attacks, scattered
    throughout counts  II, III, and III-A against  the conduct of
    Waste Management of Maine vis-a-vis its own customers.  These
    attacks  charge  Waste  Management  of Maine  with  predatory
    pricing of its waste collection services,  wrongful exclusive
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    dealing by long-term  contracts, and unreasonably restricting
    the use of the containers it furnished.8
    The Predation Claims.  The district court held that  the
    Waste  Management  defendants  were  protected  as  to  their
    customer-related  conduct under  the  state action  doctrine.
    The   court  reasoned  that   by  its  agreements   with  the
    municipalities, MMWAC had  committed itself to obey  the law;
    that Waste  Management of Maine had  contractual arrangements
    with  MMWAC;  and that  this  contractual  authority provided
    sufficient  municipal  supervision  to  cast  the garment  of
    Parker  protection  over  Waste  Management  of  Maine's  own
    conduct.   
    803 F. Supp. at 461
    .   The district  court noted,
    however, that the contracts had not been made available to it
    for inspection.  
    Id.
      We are not persuaded that the rates and
    contract terms  Waste Management  set for  its own  customers
    have been brought within Parker.
    There is simply nothing to which we have been pointed to
    show that MMWAC has claimed or exercised any control whatever
    over the rates that Waste  Management of Maine charges to its
    customers or the other terms  (such as length of contract) on
    which it  deals.   While it is  conceivable (but  not proved)
    8MMWAC is also  charged in these counts  but, apart from
    bare  references to  conspiracy,  there  is  nothing  in  the
    complaint  to connect  MMWAC with Waste  Management's actions
    vis-a-vis  its  own customers  except  the  favorable tipping
    fees.   Since the fee  payments are state  action, we do  not
    think that any  claim has been stated against  MMWAC based on
    Waste Management's alleged predation.
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    that MMWAC  claims such  authority with  respect to  customer
    contracts  in the  MMWAC communities,  it  is certainly  less
    likely that it does so in the non-MMWAC communities which are
    the locales for the predation  alleged in counts III and III-
    A.    Absent  a  showing  of  control,  questions   of  state
    authorization and the adequacy  of official supervision  need
    not even be reached.
    It is a close question whether the judgment of dismissal
    should  nevertheless  be affirmed  on an  alternative ground,
    namely, that the allegations of the complaint fail to state a
    predation claim even if the state action doctrine is ignored.
    This alternative course is urged by Waste Management, and  we
    have  given it  serious consideration.    The requisites  for
    proving  predatory   pricing  are   demanding,  because   the
    conditions under which  it is plausible  are not common,  and
    because it  can  easily be  confused with  merely low  prices
    which  benefit customers.    See Barry  Wright  Corp. v.  ITT
    Grinnell  Corp.,  
    724 F.2d 227
     (1st  Cir. 1983).   Exclusive
    dealing contracts may also benefit customers and are unlawful
    only  upon  a  particularized  showing  of  unreasonableness.
    Tampa  Electric Co.  v.  Nashville  Coal  Co., 
    365 U.S. 320
    (1961).
    Thus a complaint that did no more than  allege predatory
    pricing or  exclusive  dealing contracts  with  nothing  more
    specific might well  be susceptible to dismissal  for failure
    -17-
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    to state a claim.  The present complaint is, in a sense, both
    better and worse.  It is somewhat more specific, asserting at
    one point  that the  prices  offered by  Waste Management  of
    Maine were as much as 50 percent below market rates, at other
    places that the rates were sometimes below variable cost, and
    that the exclusive dealing contracts were for three years.
    At  the  same  time, the  complaint  goes  some distance
    toward undermining  its own  predatory pricing  claim.   Tri-
    State implies that the low prices offered by Waste Management
    of Maine were,  in some instances at least, the result of the
    favorable tipping fees  that MMWAC made available to  it.  If
    this is the  whole of the charge, then  there is no predatory
    pricing claim at  all.  A company that  rationally prices its
    own  product or service  at or above  its own  costs does not
    violate the Sherman  Act merely because  its costs, and  thus
    its prices, are lower than a  rival's costs; and this is true
    even though its lower costs may be due to  the generosity, or
    foolishness,  of another supplier who has charged the company
    too little for an input.   See generally Brooke Group Ltd. v.
    Brown & Williamson  Tobacco Corp., 
    61 U.S.L.W. 4699
    , 4702-03
    (June 21, 1993).
    Even  apart from  this  possible  explanation for  lower
    prices, Tri-State's predatory pricing claim is on the edge of
    inadequacy.    Although  the  complaint  asserts  that  Waste
    Management is pricing below variable cost--the normal test of
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    predation,  see Barry Wright--it  is not clear  what basis if
    any  Tri-State has  for  this assertion.    The reference  to
    prices  50 percent below  customary prices might  invite some
    suspicion, but in an industry like waste collection, in which
    customers  are scattered along  routes, the variable  cost of
    serving  additional customers  to piece  out a  route  may be
    extremely low.
    The claim that  the duration of the  exclusive contracts
    is unlawful is, if anything, an even thinner case on the face
    of  the complaint.   That  some  of the  contracts are  three
    years,  the  only  specific in  the  complaint,  might invite
    curiosity,   but  it  does   not  even  begin   to  establish
    illegality.  Under Tampa Electric  Co., it is the totality of
    reasons  for   such  a  term,   and  its  actual   impact  on
    competition, that are  decisive.  Here, we know nothing about
    the  number   of  customers   affected,  the   size  of   any
    cancellation  penalty,  the  practice  in  the  industry,  or
    anything  else that  might help  to  paint a  picture of  the
    competitive scene.   Of course, a plaintiff is  required only
    to plead a claim, not to recite evidence, but the  essence of
    a claim like this one lies in the details.
    A final concern is that predatory pricing is a section 2
    claim and is condemned only where it is part of an attempt to
    monopolize or is used to secure or retain an actual monopoly.
    E.g.,  C.A.T. Industrial  Disposal,  Inc. v.  Browning-Ferris
    -19-
    -19-
    Industries,  
    884 F.2d 209
      (5th  Cir.  1989).9    Tri-State
    certainly  does  allege both  the  aim  of monopoly  and  the
    actuality, but its complaint supplies very little information
    (e.g., market shares in a properly defined market) from which
    one can frame a judgment whether this claim is plausible. The
    complaint  does say  that  Waste  Management,  Inc.  and  its
    subsidiaries  are the  largest  waste  handling and  disposal
    business in Maine and in the nation; but the primary issue is
    dominance  or  prospective dominance  in  a  properly defined
    economic market.
    One's first instinct  is that monopoly would  be hard to
    sustain in a business in which the basic equipment is a truck
    and entry is apparently easy.  See generally United States v.
    Waste Management,  Inc., 
    743 F.2d 976
     (2d  Cir. 1984).   But
    waste collection might in theory be subject to local monopoly
    in  some circumstances.  Thus, the efficiencies of collecting
    from a  number of closely  located customer sites  could make
    new entry difficult,  especially if the community  were small
    and many customers  were tied to an existing  dominant hauler
    by long-term contracts; and environmental restrictions on new
    landfills in some areas could  give a decisive advantage to a
    9Exclusive  dealing, which  can be  attacked inter  alia
    under section  1 of the  Sherman Act, 15  U.S.C.   1,  can be
    condemned without a showing that monopoly power is present or
    within reach.  But  the impact on competition is  part of the
    equation and, absent  a potential monopoly or  oligopoly, the
    competitive impact may be hard to establish.
    -20-
    -20-
    hauler that controlled  the only available facility.    There
    are some hints,  but only hints, in the  complaint that Waste
    Management  of Maine  may enjoy an  advantage of  this latter
    sort.
    Taking everything  together, we  think it  wiser not  to
    affirm  the  dismissal   of  the  predation  claims   on  the
    alternative ground.  Thin and doubtful though they may be, we
    cannot  say at  this stage  that these claims  are hopelessly
    inadequate if Parker's shield is removed.  The district court
    did not rest its decision on that ground, and it has been the
    subject of only a small portion of the briefs on this appeal.
    The  old prejudice  against summary disposition  of antitrust
    claims has diminished, First National Bank v. Cities Services
    Co.,  
    391 U.S. 253
      (1968), but the grant  of a Rule 12(b)(6)
    motion on the predation claims  would, at least at this time,
    be a shade too summary.
    We underscore the limited  nature of our remand.   These
    claims  can be  stated, if  at  all, only  against the  Waste
    Management  defendants.  The district court is fully entitled
    to demand more specific explanations from Tri-State as to the
    gray areas  in its predation claims, including  the basis for
    the charge of pricing below  variable cost, the basis for the
    market definitions  urged, and the  basis for any  claim that
    monopoly  power exists  or could  plausibly be  secured  in a
    properly defined economic market.  Nothing in this opinion is
    -21-
    -21-
    intended  to preclude summary  disposition at a  later stage,
    and this need not  mean much later if  these claims prove  to
    have little substance.10
    III.  TRI-STATE'S REMAINING CLAIMS
    Count IV  of the  complaint reasserts,  under the  Maine
    antitrust statute, the  federal antitrust claims made  in the
    earlier  counts.  The  Maine antitrust statutes  parallel the
    Sherman Act,  see Me.  Rev. Stat.  Ann. tit.  10,     1101 et
    seq., and Tri-State offers no separate argument for liability
    under state law.  In point  of fact, the Maine statute  under
    which MMWAC is organized also  has an explicit exemption from
    state antitrust  laws for  specified  municipal contracts  or
    ordinances.  Me.  Rev.  Stat.  Ann.  tit.  38,     1304-B(6).
    Accordingly,  the dismissal of  the state antitrust  claim is
    sustained except as to the predation claims against the Waste
    Management defendants.
    In  count V, Tri-State  claims that the  solicitation of
    Tri-State  customers by  Waste  Management  of  Maine  was  a
    violation of Maine law against interference with advantageous
    contractual   relations.      The  gravamen   is   that  this
    solicitation   was   unlawful    because   achieved   through
    discriminatory  tipping fees,  predatory  pricing, and  other
    10The Waste  Management  defendants  are  also  free  to
    pursue their Parker defense as  to the predation claims.  Our
    holding is that on this record there is an insufficient basis
    for determining that  Parker immunity exists as  to the terms
    on which Waste Management of Maine deals with its customers.
    -22-
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    wrongs.  The district court dismissed the count on the ground
    that the  actions in  question were within  the ambit  of the
    state  legislation  and  therefore  could  not  be  "wrongful
    interference."   
    803 F. Supp. at 463-64
    .  In this court, Tri-
    State  does not argue the claim  at length, asserting instead
    that its tortious interference claim is "contingent" upon our
    finding that  the alleged  anticompetitive conduct  enjoys no
    immunity.
    We   think   the   fixing  of   tipping   fees   by  the
    municipalities and MMWAC  is embraced by the  Maine statute--
    Tri-State  makes  no  effort to  show  the  contrary--but, as
    earlier stated, we cannot find  on this record that the terms
    on  which  Waste  Management  of Maine  dealt  with  its  own
    customers has been  the subject of regulation.   Accordingly,
    count V, so  far as it makes allegations  against the private
    defendants based on Waste Management of Maine's dealings with
    its own  customers,  is remanded  for consideration  together
    with the predation claims.  Nothing in the complaint explains
    why  MMWAC is responsible for such contracts, however, and as
    to it the  dismissal of count  V is sustained for  failure to
    state a claim.
    Count  VI of  the  complaint asserts  a  claim under  42
    U.S.C.   1983 against Auburn.  In part, this count says  that
    the  City  of  Auburn  injunction  action  against  Tri-State
    represented  discriminatory prosecution  in violation  of due
    -23-
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    process principles.  Count VII makes the same complaint based
    on equal protection principles.   Count VIII, the final count
    of the complaint, re-asserts the allegations of counts VI and
    VII as violations of Maine's  own civil rights statutes.  Me.
    Rev. Stat.  Ann., tit. 5,     4682-83.  On  appeal, Tri-State
    advises that it elects not to press the selective prosecution
    issue in this court, reserving it for its state court appeal.
    This leaves only Tri-State's final contention--the other
    subject of its count  VI claim--that the Auburn  flow control
    ordinance  is "an  unconstitutional  taking of  [Tri-State's]
    property without compensation."  Tri-State's theory seems  to
    be that  the Auburn flow control ordinance  has crippled Tri-
    State's waste disposal business.   This, says Tri-State, is a
    business  in which  it has  engaged  for many  years and  its
    interests in  continuing without  undue interference  deserve
    protection as "investment-backed expectations."  Penn Central
    Transp. Co. v. New York City, 
    438 U.S. 104
    , 124 (1978).
    While the Supreme  Court did  use the  quoted phrase  to
    describe a pertinent consideration in takings cases, the Penn
    Central opinion actually reaffirms that government for public
    purposes   can,   without    compensation,   impose   general
    regulations that may  severely limit the value  of an ongoing
    business.    The  Supreme  Court  has  in  fact twice  upheld
    municipal  ordinances  granting   one  waste  collector   the
    exclusive  right to collect  and dispose of  waste within the
    -24-
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    community,  putting  existing   haulers  out  of  business.11
    Despite  Tri-State's  claims that  these cases  are outdated,
    nothing in the  Supreme Court's more recent  decisions raises
    serious doubts about  their validity.  The  Sixth Circuit has
    rejected  an argument almost identical to Tri-State's.  Hybud
    Equipment  Corp.  v. City  of  Akron, 
    654 F.2d 1187
     (1981),
    vacated on other grounds, 
    455 U.S. 931
     (1982).
    * * *
    In this case, we have concluded  that, with the possible
    exception  of  its  predation  claims  against   the  private
    defendants, none of  Tri-State's claims has any  merit.  This
    does not mean that there is no basis for Tri-State's concerns
    about  the competitive impact  of the MMWAC  arrangements, or
    for its assertion  that the plan is  unfair to it or  bad for
    recycling.  But  government  action  may be  anticompetitive,
    unfair or unwise  without being illegal.   Absent illegality,
    the solution lies with the legislature and not in the courts.
    The  judgment of the  district court is  affirmed except
    for the dismissal  of the federal and state  antitrust claims
    in  counts II-V  and the tort  claim in  count VI  insofar as
    those  counts charge  the  Waste  Management defendants  with
    predation   or   related   anticompetitive   conduct   toward
    11See  California  Reduction Co.  v.  Sanitary Reduction
    Works, 
    199 U.S. 306
     (1905); Gardner v. Michigan, 
    199 U.S. 325
    (1905).
    -25-
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    customers.  Those claims are remanded for further proceedings
    in accordance with this opinion.  No costs.
    It is so ordered.
    -26-
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Document Info

Docket Number: 92-2218

Filed Date: 7/14/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (20)

City of Columbia v. Omni Outdoor Advertising, Inc. , 111 S. Ct. 1344 ( 1991 )

united-states-of-america-plaintiff-appellee-cross-appellant-v-waste , 743 F.2d 976 ( 1984 )

Barry Wright Corporation v. Itt Grinnell Corporation , 724 F.2d 227 ( 1983 )

Gardner v. Michigan , 26 S. Ct. 106 ( 1905 )

Riverview Investments, Inc., Melvin F. Smith v. Ottawa ... , 774 F.2d 162 ( 1985 )

California Reduction Co. v. Sanitary Reduction Works , 26 S. Ct. 100 ( 1905 )

The Interface Group, Inc. v. Massachusetts Port Authority , 816 F.2d 9 ( 1987 )

Tom Hudson & Associates, Inc., and Tom Hudson v. City of ... , 746 F.2d 1370 ( 1984 )

Alfred D. Fisichelli, Etc., and Salvatore Ambra, Etc. v. ... , 956 F.2d 12 ( 1992 )

Parker v. Brown , 63 S. Ct. 307 ( 1943 )

People v. McVickers , 4 Cal. 4th 81 ( 1992 )

California Retail Liquor Dealers Assn. v. Midcal Aluminum, ... , 100 S. Ct. 937 ( 1980 )

Town of Hallie v. City of Eau Claire , 105 S. Ct. 1713 ( 1985 )

Savage v. Waste Management, Inc. , 623 F. Supp. 1505 ( 1985 )

Valerie Watterson v. Eileen Page , 987 F.2d 1 ( 1993 )

C.A.T. Industrial Disposal, Inc. D/B/A A.C.T. I Disposal v. ... , 884 F.2d 209 ( 1989 )

hybud-equipment-corp-budoff-iron-metal-co-glenwillow-landfill-inc , 654 F.2d 1187 ( 1981 )

Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City , 98 S. Ct. 2646 ( 1978 )

Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co. , 81 S. Ct. 623 ( 1961 )

Tri-State Rubbish, Inc. v. Waste Management, Inc. , 803 F. Supp. 451 ( 1992 )

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