Nursing Care v. Casualty, 1st Cir. (1993)
Nursing Care v. Casualty, 1st Cir. (1993)
Nursing Care v. Casualty, 1st Cir. (1993)
COFFIN,
conspired to
Plaintiffs
are a
group of
and conduct
a boycott
in a
granted
summary
compensation insurance.1
judgment
for defendants
The district
based
on
the
doctrines established in
Parker v. Brown,
______
_____
(1943),
U.S. 127
(1961).2
The
court
concluded that
plaintiffs'
attributable
to
legislation
conspiracy,
and
the
that,
rather than
consequently,
federal
to
the
-- was
alleged
antitrust
laws
provide no relief.
On appeal, plaintiffs contend that
construing their
After carefully
conclude
that
judgment for
court's
reviewing the
the
district
defendants.
analysis
constituted a
--
Although
finding
defendants' actions.
that
properly
caselaw, we
granted
we depart somewhat
the
in
alleged
summary
from the
conspiracy
____________________
--
and
Regulation is strict.
approved
All employers
for workers'
insurance.
Law to charge
by,
the
Maine
Superintendent
Complt.
32.
of
Insurance
The businesses
in
and
least
since
affirmative steps
low.
They
decisions in
Ins.
____
v.
(affirming
increase
1981,
NCCI
to challenge
have
and
its
members have
sought review
of
the
taken
as unfairly
Superintendent's rate
Superintendent of Ins.,
________________________
Superintendent's
of 27.5%;
NCCI had
481
A.2d
disapproval
claimed that
of
775
a
(Me.
1984)
requested rate
statistical evidence
to
the contrary,
the
Maine
legislature in
1985
that workers'
exceeding
10% in
compensation
insurance rates
be rolled
Me. Rev.
Under the
prohibited
1987, 1988
from
and
requesting rate
1989.
Id.
___
at
increases
2355.
In
addition, the 1985 Act declared that it was intended, inter alia:
_____ ____
1. . . . To prohibit price fixing agreements and other
anticompetitive behavior by insurers.
. . .
3. . . . To promote price competition among insurers .
. . .
Id. at
___
2332.
Although the
so
low that they were confiscatory, the court held that the ceilings
were not unconstitutional because
from
the market
for workers'
compensation insurance
in Maine.
(Sup.
dismissed, 538
_________
Ct.
May
A.2d 759
14,
1987)
(Me. 1988)
(Alexander,
J.),
(dismissed as moot
appeal
______
because
achieve
Plaintiffs
their goals
contend that
legally,
resorted
defendants
unable
to improper
means.
allegedly conspired
to fix
-4-
prices at a higher-than-lawful
the
Maine workers'
compensation
jointly
began
market
to induce
As early as 1986,
refusing
to
boycott of
legislation
plaintiffs claim,
insure
employers
voluntarily,
requiring
coverage through
insurer
them
to
obtain
workers'
authorized to
write workers'
compensation
system.
compensation
Every
policies in
conspirators
unable
allegedly
legislature to
increased
obtain
the
coverage.5
pressure
on
The
the
Maine
October 1987,
avert the
compensation
special
crisis
that
insurers left,
session
of
the
would
occur
Governor John
legislature
if
all
workers'
McKernan convened
devoted
exclusively
to
In
Compensation
Rating Act" (deleting the word "competitive" that had been in the
title of the 1985 Act), Me. Rev. St. Ann. tit. 24-A,
(West 1990 and 1992 Supp.).
2361-2374
It authorized
NCCI
____________________
joint
rate proposals
Insurance,
who
is
on their behalf
the
ultimate
to the
Superintendent of
decisionmaker
on
the
rates
1989 and
Superintendent rejected
collectively applied
the requested
rate
Each year,
increases, but
caps set
insurers'
price-fixing
continuing
conspiracy,
defendants
the increased
paid since
the
rates.
1987 legislation
The court
see
___
anticompetitive
antitrust
laws.
317
state
The
relied
U.S.
at
action
on
350-52,
is
court further
by the
the well-established
that
not
injury
compensable
believed that
Parker
______
caused
by
under
the
defendants'
365 U.S.
at
_____
136-40,
which
exempts from
___
antitrust liability
the collective
-6-
Plaintiffs
argue on
appeal that
the district
because it
action.
They
contend
that
legislation
itself
but
obtain
charge
higher
and
therefore inapplicable.
no
immunity
for
involved classic
and
by
they
were
defendants'
rates.
They
defendants
--
rather
injury to state
harmed
not
by
ongoing conspiracy
Parker,
______
they
insist,
the
to
is
the
anticompetitive economic
price-fixing
court erred
alleged
conspiracy
conduct --
a boycott
than political
activity
such
as
lobbying or petitioning.
Defendants
conspiracy,
which
summary judgment
based
respond that,
they
regardless of
admitted
proceedings, they
the nature
solely for
cannot
purposes
of the
of
the
be assessed
damages
Because
that
is the
defendants
only
injury
maintain that
for
which
the district
plaintiffs
seek
relief,
court correctly
granted
summary judgment.
II.
The issues
we face on this
law, and
Co. v.
___
1992).
(1st Cir.
had inadequate
do not see
how
Defendants
have
admitted, for
purposes
of
their
-7-
motion, that
compensation
market.
Plaintiffs identify
discoverable
fact that
would
before
us.
We note,
be material
other
to the
possibly
legal issues
Plaintiffs
make a
related
erred
in repeatedly failing
light
most favorable
to
claim that
the district
to construe their
them, arguing
that
court
complaint in the
this standard
of
applies
the
complaint.
disposition.
As
demonstrate,
This
claim
our analysis
also
is
in the
plaintiffs' appeal
irrelevant
following
fails no
to
our
sections will
matter
how liberally
is barred as a
matter of
law.
III.
We begin
engendered
some confusion,
but apparently no
statement
Opinion at 22.
and similar
The State of
references
-8-
its opinion,
defendants' conspiracy to
under Noerr."
_____
real disagreement
that has
--
no injury -- is immune
elsewhere in
the opinion
as
holding
that
economic
private actors
boycott
Disturbed
to
by this
lawfully
influence
specific
may
employ a
legislative
holding, the
concerted
determination.
State sought
and was
that the
statement attributed to it
this
any
some doubt
the
obtain
by the State.
boycott, even
favorable
the
Regardless, at
no opposition from
defendants all
an economic boycott
court intended
Plaintiffs and
district
agree that
private
Act
if the
boycotters'
state action.
ultimate goal
This view,
we
is to
find, clearly
Noerr,
_____
the
Supreme
designed to
Court
held
that
the
secure legislative
defendant
a publicity
action harmful
to the
The
democracy, individuals
the
government
permitted
to
anticompetitive,
of
do
must have
their wishes,"
so
id. at
___
even
if
139-40.
365
in a
representative
the ability to
"freely inform
id.
___
their
Any
at
137,
motives
and they
are
other conclusion
are
entirely
"would
impute to the
Sherman Act
a purpose to
regulate, not
business
have no
-9-
legislative history of
the Act."
Id.
___
at
137.
Noerr does not
_____
protect from
antitrust liability,
that certain
the Sherman
and
boycotts, are
simply because
however,
violative of
coverage of
the .
. . Act
enactment of favorable
other
words,
classic
economic
of
trade
is
to
case closely
involved a
analogous to the
boycott organized
any
fully explored in
court appointments
one before
by members
us.
of the
to
represent
indigent
raise the
defense
hourly rate
work.
constituted
The
of pay
Supreme
for court-appointed
Court
a "plain violation of
held
that
the
criminal
boycott
conclusion," id.
___
involved "mere
of laws,"
at
424.
Noerr,
_____
365 U.S. at
the Court
emphasized,
passage or enforcement
135), not an
actual
-10-
restraint on price
to
antitrust liability
boycott.
Id. at 428.
thus
was inapplicable
to the
lawyers'
___
The district court here
from
the
case
before
anticompetitive
the
District
participant.
it,
least
in
part,
because
the
Columbia
Opinion
government's role
City
at 20-21.
Council,
as
commercial
to view the
as significant to
the Supreme
as a purchaser
to say,
not establish
there was
not
a "government-as-market-
government was
had sought to
the
influence the
of lawyers
The Court
that
inter alia,
_____ ____
Noerr
_____
restraint of trade is
provides
immunity
when
the
alleged
the intended
consequence
___________
of
the
defendants'
concerted
activity.
It
is
-11-
trade
economic
through
boycott or
measure, even
when
other
traditionally
the boycott's
unlawful
sole purpose
is to
the
private individual
boycotted purchaser
is
irrelevant;
the
is
the
government or
significant
factor
is
too,
beyond doubt
the defendants
allegedly employed
"`constituted a classic
an economic
restraint of
422 (quoting
Court of
Appeals, 856
F.2d 226,
234
(1988)).
during
Had
damages based on
the
antitrust
boycott
claim.
These
they
would
have
plaintiffs, however,
had
viable
explicitly
have
-12-
the boycott was in place, before the Maine Legislature passed the
1987 Act.6
district court
The
court
for
correctly
legislation
recognized
permitting
that
defendants
conspiracy
to charge
to
higher
press
rates was
Because
plaintiffs sought
no direct
market damages
from
a
prohibited
equivalent
restraint
to the
of
trade
unethical
but
as
and deceptive
lobbying
publicity
effort
campaign
doing,
the court
may
have overstated
its
holding
As we
caselaw.
violation
Defendants'
of
boycott
the Sherman
plainly constituted
Act
even though
plaintiffs
per
___
se
__
seek no
central
issue
recover
damages based
workers'
compensation
before
on the
us is
whether
higher rates
insurance
since
plaintiffs
they have
enactment of
may
paid for
the
1987
____________________
legislation.
doctrine
because
The district
court
ruled that
the state
action
rate
Legislature,
and
increases
adopted
were
and
authorized
implemented
by
by
the
the
Maine
state's
Superintendent of Insurance.
In Parker, "[r]elying on
______
sovereignty, [the Supreme
did
act
of
government.'"
City of Columbia
__________________
v. Omni Outdoor
_____________
the legislature
and
Superintendent of
Parker,
______
the actions
Insurance superseded
an injury inflicted
by defendants' conspiracy.
Plaintiffs offer
two reasons
in the
defendants'
district
use of
statute
may
not
responsibility.
legislation simply
be
activity to
maintain that
coerce the
doctrine inapplicable.
was pressured
used
doctrine does
court, plaintiffs
unlawful
legislature unlawfully
to
Second, plaintiffs
permitting rate
to act, they
insulate
argue that
the
favorable
Because the
contend, the
defendants
it was
from
not the
them, but
the defendants'
longstanding
conspiracy to
charge the
maximum
possible rates.
-14-
Neither
contention,
of
these
arguments
is
persuasive.
The
first
In a
Parker
______
immunity
turns
on
who
___
imposed
the
challenged
v. Ronwin, 466
______
(1984)).
Omni rejected a proposed
____
doctrine
that
employees were
would
have
involved as
immunity
when
government
actors in
methods
for
defining
conspiracy
approach
that
would
make
Parker
______
connection with
some other
Id.
___
would
be,
at
inapplicable
violation of state
at 1353.
exception,
It
anticompetitive state
an
or federal law
imprecise
way
actions should be
an
only
in
if,
question, bribery or
including
were established.
determine
which
liability.
Such unlawful
whether the
interest.
A
if he would
interest, the
holding in
Omni
____
fully embraces
plaintiffs'
tendered
coercion
exception.
conspiracy,
Allegations
implicate
only
legislators' motivation.
of
the
Omni
____
coercion,
off-limits
like those
issue
of
of
the
state action
legislation.
theory bears
Because the
statute does
not mandate
_______
that
plaintiffs maintain
damaged
resulted
maximum
rates
statute.
that
from
and not
the higher
defendants'
from the
rates by
conspiracy
which they
to
were
charge
legislature's adoption
the
of the
First, the
on the
from
the
approach
adopted
on
appeal.
significant,
Throughout
the
in
the
workers'
compensation
market.
the
objective
of the
conspiracy was
that very
_________
enactment.
Plaintiffs in fact allege that they were
injured by defendants' conspiracy to violate the 1985
____
legislation.
It is therefore the 1985 legislation
against which state action claims must be tested.
Plaintiffs' Memorandum in Opposition to Defendants'
Joint Motion
the defendants to
See
___
the
App.
at
720.
When
district
court
asked why
up by the legislature in
Id. at 729.
___
the
"acting
the enactment
to be
He continued:
to
unlawful
means,
making
the
new
occur until
after
rates
wholly
result
was
changed and
of
argued,
damages did
higher
rates
-17-
authorized, defendants
past
would
illegal
conduct
not
be
immunized
so that their
retroactively.
lead to the
anomalous result
boycotts
that unsuccessful
____________
not successfully
Memorandum
in
Opposition,
at
35-36 (emphasis
in
now contend
that,
after passage
of
the 1987
act,
to
rates
sell
below
the
new
maximum
established
by
the
Superintendent of Insurance.
That agreement is
the 1987
Act
allowing independent
state
policy
still
favors
not entitled to
the provision
ratesetting demonstrates
competition.
Consequently,
rate increases.8
____________________
Act never
was offered
to the
expressly disclaimed
Parker issue.
the new
indeed, as
statute's
______
plaintiffs
higher
asserted, when
premiums.
See
___
the
Memorandum
State enacted
in
the law
Opposition
to
allowing
Summary
Led
the defendants could be held responsible for the rate increases - despite authorization
of those rates by
the state --
if they
not unduly detain us, however, because the theory is in any event
unavailing.
When the
1987 statute, it
did not simply eliminate the ceiling on the permissible rates for
workers' compensation insurance, but it also
state's previous pro-competitive policy toward
1987 Act
filings9 and, in
The
our view, it
____________________
conspiracies, to constrict supply, to fix prices, and
to boycott consumers in order to coerce the removal of
__________________________________
the existing price ceiling.
__________________________
Plaintiffs' Brief at 31 (additional emphasis added).
must
be construed
insurers to
approval
within
as
implicitly condoning
charge the
by the
rates they
an agreement
jointly propose,
Superintendent.
When
among
subject to
insurers work
together
presumably
believe
insurance, we
are
appropriate
fail to see
for
workers' compensation
how it could be
rates allowed
by the state, particularly when the approved rates fall below the
jointly proposed rates.
At a
charge
minimum, it
the approved
must be lawful
rate where,
for insurers to
as here,
agree to
the Superintendent's
on a
statute
stipulates
that
2362,
set
profit."
(2).
the
Me.
Rev.
limit on
is
be appropriate
context,
for, and
the legislature
thus used
evidently
sort of
In
this
"price
charge
to or
use a
rate or
rating
Plaintiffs
deviation to
"to adhere
rely
on the
provision
a uniform
rate was
allowing
downward rate
defendants' conspiracy to
unauthorized and,
consequently, not
-20-
immunized
under Parker.
______
But
permissive provision
policy favoring
Court,
States,
______
is
in
overriding characteristic of
the
to ratemaking that
certainly does
competitive
pricing.
On its
not establish
Moreover,
is the
the
own,
a state
Supreme
United
______
acting pursuant to
a regime of
compelled,
submission
a challenge to
to
the joint
bureaus in four
states
before
state agencies.
In
the
course of
its
U.S.
97,
105
anticompetitive
(1980),
conduct
of
for
private
determining
parties
whether
within
the
state
justices
private party
then
considered
can be attributed
whether the
to a clearly
actions
of
articulated state
policy, within the meaning of the Midcal test's first prong, even
______
-21-
if
the
activity.
state does
not
Id. at
___
59-60.
compel
the challenged
The Court
anticompetitive
observed that a
compulsion
that
wished to
negatively affecting
regulate
given
industry
principles of federalism
--
thereby
-- while
perhaps
to resolve
[federalism
and
competition]
expressly permits,
_______
may
conflicts between
competition in
by
two competing
impairing
both
interests
more
than
(emphasis in original).
In
this
case,
it
is manifestly
clear
that
defendants'
The
the state
and
modifying
unquestionably
meets
supervision.
Indeed,
Midcal is
______
See
___
proceeding,
prong two's
plaintiffs
Reply Brief,
defendants'
the
at
19 n.15.
"converting
the
insurers'
proposed
rates
requirement
of active
state
expressly
acknowledge
that
Plaintiffs instead
results
of
that
hammer
on
ratemaking
____
_______
private agreement to
_______
and to
-22-
refuse
to deal at
level."
Id.
___
(emphasis in
original).
changed landscape.
Act in
Even
by conspiring to
raise the maximum prices they could charge beyond those permitted
by
the 1985
Act, it
does not
them to
unlawful
for
approved
the legislature
we
have
to
charge
follow that
the rate
to the 1987
to be assessed in
As
agree
necessarily
the
1987
subsequently
Act.
Once
discussed,
it was
Act
and procedures.
endorsed
cooperative
the newly
sought
by
allowed
authorized
plaintiffs
under
the
--
1985
rates.
Accordingly, the
the differential
Act
and
the
new
between
rates
the
damages
rates
charged
by
-- must be viewed as a
product of
be held accountable
for
V.
In summary,
we hold
that the
economic
boycott and
price
early fall
of 1987
constituted a per
___
se violation
__
of the
-23-
Sherman
Act,
and
protection for
legislation.
did
not
fall
concerted activity
within
the
Noerr doctrine's
_____
designed to
elicit favorable
the amount of
recoverable
the state
from the
insurers.
Because
authorized
collective
higher
maximum
ratemaking
rates,
any
authorized
and
closely supervised
the
setting
of
to
charge
the
and defendants
are
agreement
among defendants
rates
permissible,
is
immune from liability for the increase under the Parker doctrine.
______
Affirmed.
________
-24-