O'BYRNE v. CHEKER OIL COMPANY, 76 C 881.
Decision Date | 04 December 1981 |
Docket Number | No. 76 C 881.,76 C 881. |
Citation | 530 F. Supp. 70 |
Court | U.S. District Court — Northern District of Illinois |
Parties | James C. O'BYRNE, et al., Plaintiffs, v. CHEKER OIL COMPANY, et al., Defendants. |
James P. Chapman, Merle L. Royce, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiffs.
Sherwin J. Malkin, Malkin & Gottlieb, Chicago, Ill., for defendants.
Plaintiffs are one present (Mangialardi) and four former independent gasoline dealers who now lease or previously have leased service stations from Cheker Oil Company ("Cheker"). They originally sued Cheker and Marathon Oil Company ("Marathon"), 50% owner of outstanding Cheker stock, claiming that defendants have:
This Court's September 4, 1981 memorandum opinion and order (the "Opinion") granted Marathon's motion for summary judgment because the Complaint sought "to implicate Marathon only by virtue of its alleged `assistance' to or conspiracy with Cheker ..." (Opinion at 10) and there was no evidence to support a finding of conspiracy. At the time of the Opinion Cheker's summary judgment was in the course of briefing by the parties. For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, Cheker's motion (now having been fully briefed) is also granted.
Complaint Counts I and III assert a Cheker-Marathon conspiracy to deprive plaintiffs of rights protected by the federal antitrust laws and the state common law of tortious interference. Those claims necessarily fall with the Opinion's summary judgment in favor of the only alleged co-conspirator, Marathon. Without conspirators there can be no conspiracy. Accordingly summary judgment must also be entered in favor of Cheker on the same claims.
Complaint Count II, whose gravamen is not conspiracy, is not infected by the same deficiency as the other two counts. It relies on the acknowledged facts that:
Plaintiffs urge such differential pricing violates Act § 2(a).
They have simply misread — or not read — Section 2(a), which makes it:
unlawful for any person... to discriminate in pricing between different purchasers... where the effect of such discrimination may be substantially... to injure, destroy, or prevent competition with any person who either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination, or with customers of either of them....
Here the persons who "received the benefit of such discrimination"1 are Cheker's retail customers, the ultimate consumers of its gasoline. They are in competition with no one, let alone plaintiffs. They themselves have no "customers." Section 2(a) was not directed at conduct of the type complained of in Count II.
This same conclusion was simply put in von Kalinowski, 9 Antitrust Laws and Trade Regulation § 68.043 at 68-57 (emphasis in original):
The Robinson-Patman Act proscribes price discrimination only if injury to competition flows from that discrimination. Thus, a supplier who charges a different price to his distributors than he does to his consumer accounts will not stand in violation of Section 2(a) of that Act. This is because consumers, whether they are ultimate consumers or commercial users, do not compete with distributors in the resale of the particular goods.
As the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit said in American Oil Co. v. McMullin, 508 F.2d 1345, 1353 (10th Cir. 1975), a case from which this Court's conclusion follows a fortiori:
A similar analysis applies to American's bulk distribution pricing. McMullin objects because consumer...
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