Opinion
08-21-2013
ORDER ADOPTING IN PART AND
MODIFYING IN PART SPECIAL
MASTER'S REPORT AND
RECOMMENDATION ON
DEFENDANTS' MOTION TO
DISMISS THE DIRECT ACTION
PLAINTIFFS' COMPLAINTS
I. INTRODUCTION
Now before the Court are the Direct Action Plaintiffs' ("DAPs") and Defendants' competing objections to and motions to adopt the Special Master's May 2, 2013 Report and Recommendation on Defendants' Motion to Dismiss the DAP Complaints. The matter is fully briefed, and the Court finds it appropriate for decision without oral argument. Civ. L.R. 7-1(b). As explained below, the Court ADOPTS in part and MODIFIES in part the Special Master's Report and Recommendation, and accordingly GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Defendants' motions to dismiss the DAP Complaints.
The full list of DAPs and Defendants in this case is excessively long. Where necessary in this Order, the Court will address the arguments of particular groups of Defendants by name.
The complaints at issue are: Stoebner v. LG Electronics, Inc., No. 11-cv-05381 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1](Nov. 7, 2011) ("Polaroid Compl."); Target Corp. v. Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd., No. 11-cv-05514 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 9] (Jan. 6, 2012) ("Target Am. Compl."); P.C. Richard & Son Long Island Corp. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 12-cv-02648 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("P.C. Richard Compl."); Schultze Agency Servs., LLC v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 12-cv-02649 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("Tweeter Compl."); CompuCom Systems, Inc. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-06396 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("CompuCom Compl."); Interbond Corp. of Am. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-06275 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("Interbond Compl."); Costco Wholesale Corp. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-06397 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("Costco Compl."); Siegel v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-05502 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("Circuit City Compl."); Office Depot, Inc. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-06276 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("Office Depot Compl."); Best Buy Co., Inc. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-05513 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 1] (Nov. 14, 2011) ("Best Buy Compl."); and Electrograph Systems, Inc. v. Hitachi, Ltd., No. 11-cv-01656 (N.D. Cal.) [ECF No. 5] (Mar. 10, 2011) ("Electrograph Am. Compl.").
ECF Nos. 1676 ("Defs.' Statement"), 1704 ("DAP Obj'ns: Philips & LG"), 1706 ("Defs.' Joint Obj'ns"), 1708 ("DAP Obj'ns: Joint"), 1749 ("DAP Mot. to Adopt"), 1750 ("LG Joinder"), 1752 ("Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt"), 1755 ("Philips Mot. to Adopt"), 1799 ("Defs.' Joint Reply"), 1800 ("DAP Reply: Philips & LG"), 1801 ("DAP Reply: Joint"). The underlying motions are, of course, fully briefed as well. ECF Nos. 1317 ("Defs.' MTD"), 1319 ("Philips MTD"), 1320 ("LG MTD Joinder"), 1384 ("Opp'n to Defs. MTD"), 1387 ("Opp'n to Philips MTD"), 1419 ("Reply ISO Philips MTD"), 1420 ("LG Joinder Re: Philips Reply"), 1422 ("Joint Reply ISO Defs.' MTD").
II. BACKGROUND
The DAPs allege that Defendants, each a manufacturer of cathode-ray tubes ("CRTs"), conspired to fix prices for CRTs. The DAPs do not allege that Defendants conspired to fix the prices of products containing CRTs ("CRT Products").
Each DAP alleges that it bought at least one CRT product from a Defendant or an entity owned or operated by a Defendant. The DAPs, despite their moniker, are classified as indirect purchasers under antitrust law -- not direct purchasers.
In August 2012, Defendants jointly filed a motion to dismiss and a motion for judgment on the pleadings as to some of the DAP complaints. Separately, Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. and Philips Electronics North America Corp. (collectively "Philips ") filed a similar motion, joined by LG Electronics, Inc. and LG Electronics USA, Inc. (collectively ("LG").
On February 15, 2013, the motions to dismiss came before this case's Special Master for oral argument. See ECF No. 1707 ("J.A.") Ex. 14 ("Tr."). The Special Master issued his Report and Recommendation in this matter on May 2, which makes numerous conclusions and recommendations that are summarized below. ECF No. 1664 ("R&R"). The parties then filed lengthy objections and motions to adopt parts of the R&R. Now they ask the Court to rule on those requests.
The Court commends the parties' and the Special Master's cooperation and coordination on what all can agree has been a lengthy, complicated matter.
III. LEGAL STANDARD
A. The Court's Review of the Special Master's Conclusions
The Court reviews the Special Master's conclusions of law de novo. ECF No. 302 ("Order Appointing Special Master").
B. Motions to Dismiss
A motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) "tests the legal sufficiency of a claim." Navarro v. Block, 250 F.3d 729, 732 (9th Cir. 2001). "Dismissal can be based on the lack of a cognizable legal theory or the absence of sufficient facts alleged under a cognizable legal theory." Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Dep't, 901 F.2d 696, 699 (9th Cir. 1988). "When there are well-pleaded factual allegations, a court should assume their veracity and then determine whether they plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief." Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 679 (2009). However, "the tenet that a court must accept as true all of the allegations contained in a complaint is inapplicable to legal conclusions. Threadbare recitals of the elements of a cause of action, supported by mere conclusory statements, do not suffice." Id. at 678 (citing Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007)). The allegations made in a complaint must be both "sufficiently detailed to give fair notice to the opposing party of the nature of the claim so that the party may effectively defend against it" and "sufficiently plausible" such that "it is not unfair to require the opposing party to be subjected to the expense of discovery." Starr v. Baca, 652 F.3d 1202, 1216 (9th Cir. 2011).
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Federal Claims
Each DAP asserts causes of action under the federal antitrust laws. Federal antitrust plaintiffs normally have standing only if they are direct purchasers of the allegedly price-fixed goods. Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, 431 U.S. 720 (1977). Indirect purchasers generally do not have federal antitrust standing. See Arizona v. Shamrock Foods Co., 729 F.2d 1208, 1211-12 (9th Cir. 1984). However, the Court held in Defendants' motion for summary judgment against the Direct Purchaser Plaintiffs ("DPP") class that indirect purchasers may have federal antitrust standing under the "ownership or control" exception by establishing that they were harmed by a price-fixing conspiracy between a manufacturer and an entity it owns or controls. See In re CRT Antitrust Litig., 911 F. Supp. 2d 857, 868-69 (N.D. Cal. 2012) (citing Royal Printing Co. v. Kimberly Clark Corp., 621 F.2d 323 (9th Cir. 1980)).
The parties do not dispute that the Court's holding on the ownership or control exception remains law of the case, thereby compelling denial of Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' federal claims. Defendants seek to preserve their objections to that holding for appeal, and to apply the Court's holdings denying application of two other exceptions to the Illinois Brick rule, the "co-conspirator" and "cost-plus" exceptions. The Special Master accordingly recommended that the Court grant Defendants' motion to the extent that it challenges the application of those two exceptions, and deny the motion to the extent that it challenges the DAPs' right to proceed under the ownership or control exception. R&R at 5. The Court finds the Special Master's conclusions on this matter appropriate and ADOPTS the Special Master's recommendations. Id. Defendants' motion is GRANTED to the extent that it challenges the DAPs' right to proceed under the cost-plus or co-conspirator exceptions to Illinois Brick, and DENIED to the extent that it challenges the DAPs' right to proceed under the ownership or control exception.
This Order expresses no view as to whether the DAPs will be able to prove what is needed to establish the ownership or control exception. The Court also makes no ruling on the adequacy of the DAPs' allegations of ownership and control.
B. State Law Claims
i. Joint Motion to Dismiss Based on Statutes of Limitation
Nine of the twelve DAP Complaints were filed on approximately November 14, 2011. R&R at 6. They allege violations of seventeen states' laws. Id. Fourteen of those states have four-year statutes of limitations on the DAPs' claims, and two have three-year statutes of limitations. Id. Accordingly, as the Special Master found, any claim based on Defendants' actions before November 14, 2007, is prima facie barred by those states' statutes of limitations. Id. The parties disputed whether those statutes of limitations should be tolled because of the tolling doctrines of either fraudulent concealment or so-called "American Pipe" or cross-jurisdictional tolling. Id. Defendants assert that fraudulent concealment could not apply to toll the statutes of limitation, because the DAPs had actual notice (or at least inquiry notice) of the factual basis for their claims by November 8, 2007 at the earliest and November 14, 2007 at the latest. Id. The Special Master found that Defendants' notice argument turned on disputed issues of fact, not law. Id. He therefore recommended that the Court deny Defendants' motion on this point as inappropriate under Rule 12(b)(6). Id. The Special Master did not reach the issue of American Pipe tolling. Id.
Defendants object to the Special Master's recommendation, arguing that as a matter of law, the DAPs had a duty as of November 8, 2007, to inquire into whether they had claims against Defendants. Defs.' Joint Obj'ns at 19-21. On that day, as the European Commission issued a press release about certain Defendants being raided in connection with a worldwide antitrust investigation of CRT pricing. Id. at 19. According to Defendants, these raids would have raised red flags impelling any reasonably diligent person to investigate and act on possible antitrust claims. Id. Indeed, more than thirty complaints were filed within six months of those 2007 raids, and many specifically identify the raids as triggering notice. Id. DAPs argue that the November 8, 2007 press release was insufficient to put them on notice, because it did not (1) "identify which category of illegal conduct it was investigating"; (2) establish that there was a violation; (3) identify the companies investigated; (4) indicate whether the investigation related to products the DAPs purchased; or (5) indicate whether United States commerce was affected. DAP Mot. to Adopt at 14-15.
Defendants challenge all of these assertions, arguing that (1) the press release indicated that the investigation was part of a "cartel inquiry"; (2) the press release's language on cartels and restrictive business practices should have raised an antitrust flag; (3) DAPs themselves note that the CRT industry was dominated by just a few companies, and other plaintiffs managed to figure out who had been subject to investigation; (4) the press release clearly referred to CRTs, and DAPs were some of the world's largest CRT purchasers; and (5) DAPs alleged a global CRT market conspiracy, which would necessarily include both the European and United States markets. Defs.' Joint Reply at 10-11.
Defendants also argue that the R&R applies a higher notice standard than is necessary in the Ninth Circuit. Defs.' Joint Mot. at 20. They claim that the Ninth Circuit requires only that "[w]here a plaintiff's suspicions have been or should have been excited, there can be no fraudulent concealment where he could have then confirmed his earlier suspicion by diligent pursuit of further information," not that tolling continues until plaintiffs have constructive notice and enough time to file a complaint. Id. (quoting Conmar Corp. v. Mitsui & Co. (U.S.A.), Inc., 858 F.2d 499, 502 (9th Cir. 1988)).
The Court does not find Defendants' arguments persuasive. They remain reliant on disputed facts. The Court therefore finds the Special Master's conclusions correct and ADOPTS them. "[I]t is generally inappropriate to resolve the fact-intensive allegations of fraudulent concealment at the motion to dismiss stage, particularly where the proof relating to the extent of the fraudulent concealment is alleged to be largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators." In re Rubber Chemicals Antitrust Litig., 504 F. Supp. 2d 777, 789 (N.D. Cal. 2007); see also Conmar, 858 F.2d at 504-05.
Further, the Special Master's discussion of constructive notice had nothing to do with the standard of review he applied, which ultimately looked to the difference between matters of fact and matters of law under a Rule 12(b)(6) motion.
Finally, the Court finds that it need not address the issue of American Pipe tolling, also called cross-jurisdictional tolling. American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah, 414 U.S. 538, 554 (1974), established that in some instances, filing a federal class action tolls statutes of limitation on the individual claims of putative class members, pending a decision on class certification. The Special Master recommended in the R&R that it would be unnecessary to consider American Pipe if the Court adopted the recommendation on fraudulent concealment, since the cross-jurisdictional tolling question is not dispositive and would require the Court to rule on a messy array of non-binding, extra-jurisdictional case law and policy arguments. R&R at 7. The Court agrees. There is no reason to decide as a matter of law that cross-jurisdictional tolling applies in this case.
ii. Joint Motion to Dismiss Based on Due Process
Defendants argue that subjecting them to state antitrust laws would violate their right to due process, which demands significant contacts between the parties or occurrences and the state whose law is to be applied. See Defs.' Joint Reply at 2-5. The DAPs move to adopt the Special Master's R&R denying Defendants' motion on this point. DAP Mot. to Adopt at 3-6.
At the hearing before the Special Master, the parties both argued that they were applying the legal standard from Allstate Insurance Co. v. Hague, 449 U.S. 302 (1981), though on the day of the hearing, the Ninth Circuit was to issue an opinion on the due process applicability of California antitrust law to out-of-state plaintiffs. See R&R at 9. The Ninth Circuit did so in AT&T Mobility LLC v. AU Optronics Corp., 707 F.3d 1106 (9th Cir. 2013), and the Special Master ordered supplemental briefing on that case's applicability to the parties' arguments. After reviewing those briefs and the record, the Special Master concluded that AT&T broadened Allstate and compelled the denial of Defendants' motion because application of a state's law would only violate due process if the state has "no significant contact or significant aggregation of contacts, creating state interests, with the parties and the occurrence or transaction." R&R at 9 (citing AT&T, 707 F.3d at 1110). Since the due process theories Defendants had articulated did not rely on that relatively broad standard -- instead, Defendants would have limited territorial application of state law to states where the DAPs purchased CRT Products or negotiated their purchase -- the Special Master recommended that Defendants' motion, as framed, should be denied. Id.
Defendants object to the Special Master's recommendations on three grounds: (1) the R&R erroneously applied the AT&T standard to the DAPs' California claims under the Cartwright Act, since the DAPs provide only conclusory allegations about Defendants' California-related conduct; (2) AT&T does not apply to the DAPs' claims for other states' laws, since that case was limited to discussion of California's Cartwright Act alone; and (3) even if AT&T applied to other states' laws, the DAPs' non-California claims would not satisfy the requirements of due process. Defs.' Joint Obj'ns at 9-10. The DAPs ask the Court to adopt the R&R on this point. DAP Mot. to Adopt at 3-5.
AT&T addressed what factual allegations district courts should consider in determining whether due process limits the application of a given state's law. The specific question before the Ninth Circuit in AT&T was whether a district court was correct to consider the "relevant occurrence or transaction," for due process purposes in an antitrust case under California law, as being limited to the price-fixed good's place of purchase. AT&T, 707 F.3d at 1109. The district court had held that because an antitrust plaintiff's purchase of the allegedly price-fixed good occurred outside California, due process prevented the application of California law to the defendants even though some conspiratorial activity had occurred in California. Id. The Ninth Circuit held that such a narrow consideration was improper, based partly on the fact that Allstate set a permissive standard for due process considerations compared to the former standard that tied state laws' applicability to the place of purchase. Id. at 1113. The Ninth Circuit concluded that "anticompetitive conduct by a defendant within a state that is related to a plaintiff's alleged injuries and is not 'slight and casual' establishes a 'significant aggregation of contacts, creating state interests, such that choice of its law is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair.'" Id. at 1113.
Defendants argue that AT&T's reasoning was narrowly restricted to Cartwright Act claims, based on the Ninth Circuit's specific holding about the case below, but they ignore the case's broader affirmation of the Allstate standard and the guidance it provides to district courts. Nothing in AT&T or Judge Illston's consideration of it on remand limits AT&T's application to California or the Cartwright Act. Defendants' argument that AT&T's reasoning does not apply outside California is an inaccurate reading of the case, and an inaccurate statement of the law, since AT&T effectively reaffirms the decades-old rule from Allstate.
There remains, however, the threshold question of whether Defendants properly raise the theories on which they base their objections to the Special Master's R&R. Their arguments before him were, again, premised on their theory that some states' antitrust and consumer protection laws cannot apply to Defendants if the DAPs do not allege purchases or negotiations in those particular states. See R&R at 8-9. The Special Master denied Defendants' motion on those grounds because it relied on a theory the Ninth Circuit expressly overruled in AT&T. Defendants' arguments in this round of briefing are newly raised, because Defendants did not make the same arguments in their motion to dismiss or before the Special Master. However, Defendants maintain in their reply brief that the core of their arguments before the Special Master and in these papers is the same: "certain of the DAPs' claims must be dismissed because they do not sufficiently allege the appropriate contacts with the relevant states at issue." Defs.' Joint Reply at 3.
The Court finds, in this particular case, that there is no good reason to ignore a fully briefed argument on procedural grounds. Moreover, the parties' briefs before the Special Master discuss essentially these same issues in detail. The DAPs have always contended that Allstate's contacts analysis has been the right one, as the Ninth Circuit affirmed in AT&T, and while Defendants' argument has changed during this briefing round, both sides adequately addressed the issues. See DAP Opp'n to Defs.' MTD at 24-25 & nn.26-28 (arguing that all of the DAPs' complaints meet Allstate's standard). Essentially, AT&T affirms that the Court's due process analysis in cases like this one should proceed as it has since Allstate's decision in 1982. As noted above, the Court has found that AT&T is applicable to the parties' arguments, so the question is whether the DAPs' pleadings survive a due process challenge.
See, e.g., DAP Opp'n to Defs.' Mot. at 24 n.23 (confirming the DAPs' consistent position that plaintiffs' purchasing activities are not the only relevant contacts for due process purposes).
Accordingly, the central question in this case is whether the DAPs have alleged anticompetitive conduct by Defendants within a state that is related to the DAPs' alleged injuries and is not "slight and casual," thereby establishing a "significant aggregation of contracts, creating state interests, such that choice of its law is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair." See AT&T, 707 F.3d at 1113 (quoting Allstate, 449 U.S. at 312-13). In undertaking this analysis, the Court is to consider more than just the place where an allegedly price-fixed product was purchased. See id. at 1111-12. Defendants argue that the DAPs' claims under all state laws fail to allege facts tying Defendants' alleged anticompetitive conduct to any of the states under whose laws the DAPs seek relief. See Defs.' Joint Reply at 3. According to Defendants, this Court has found such pleading defects to warrant dismissal in cases like this one. Id. (citing In re TFT-LCD, Nos. M 07-1827 SI, C 10-4945 SI, 2013 WL 1891367, at *4 (N.D. Cal. May 6, 2013)).
Defendants are wrong on this point as well. They rely on In re TFT-LCD, 2013 WL 1891367, in part, to argue that the DAPs' pleadings of state-specific purchases and general conspiratorial activities are insufficient to tie Defendants to the states at issue in this case, but that decision is factually inapposite here. As noted above, the question in that case was whether plaintiffs could, within the bounds of due process, bring state antitrust claims against defendants who had not sold goods within a state but had allegedly conducted some conspiracy-related business there. See id. at *1-2. On remand after AT&T, Judge Illston found that the place of purchase alone was not dispositive: if there was no purchase within a state, other activities related to the plaintiffs' injury could warrant application of that state's laws so long as it would not be arbitrary or unfair. Id. at *3-4.
That conclusion does not mean, however, that a purchase alone is insufficient to merit application of a state's laws despite a due process challenge. Defendants' arguments on this point muddle the issue. Defendants seem to suggest that if the DAPs allege a sale within a state, but do not include detailed, defendant-by-defendant allegations of anticompetitive conduct in those states, due process would deny claims under those states' laws. Defs.' Joint Obj'ns at 9-10. This misses the point of AT&T, which held that absence of a sale within a state did not preclude the application of that state's antitrust laws if other facts sufficiently tied the defendants' activities to that state. AT&T did not hold that an in-state sale alone could not satisfy due process, especially when, in context, it would be proper under due process to subject a defendant to the rules of that state.
Defendants also argue that AT&T does not apply to state laws that address only the sale of price-fixed goods, but not agreements or conspiracies involving those goods. Defs.' Joint Obj'ns at 9-10 & n.5. This argument fails. Defendants provide no support for their restrictive interpretations of those states' laws. Moreover, their argument relies on the proposition that AT&T only applies to the Cartwright Act, which is wrong.
In this case, the Court finds that Defendants' direction of price-fixed goods into certain states renders Defendants subject to those states' antitrust and consumer protection laws. The DAPs' pleadings on this issue are somewhat bare, but not unacceptably so in context. The DAPs make it clear enough, for Rule 12(b)(6) purposes, that Defendants are alleged to have conspired to fix prices on CRT Products and then sold those goods to businesses and consumers in the various states alleged in the DAPs' complaints. This is not a slight and casual connection, nor is the application of those states' laws to Defendants' conduct arbitrary or unfair. See Allstate, 449 U.S. at 312-13; AT&T, 703 F.3d at 1113.
The DAPs' pleadings alleging sufficient contacts with the various states at issue in this matter, including Defendants' alleged sales of products and conspiratorial activities, appear in the following complaints: CompuCom Compl. ¶¶ 11, 16, 18, 21, 31, 42, 47, 49, 59, 61-62, 67, 79, 173-76, 178, 187, 237-39, 242, 254, 256-67; Costco Compl. ¶¶ 12-14, 47-48, 53, 142-46; Electrograph FAC ¶¶ 16, 18-20, 27, 29, 36, 56, 61, 63, 73, 75, 77, 89, 189-92, 200, 251-53, 256, 260, 266, 269, 271-72, 276-77, 280; Office Depot Compl. ¶¶ 11, 18, 19, 49, 61-62, 66, 78, 172-75, 177, 186, 244-46, 249; Polaroid Compl. ¶¶ 4, 8, 9, 11, 18, 21, 189-91, 36, 46, 47, 60, 64, 166, 168, 194; Target Compl. ¶¶ 14, 16-19, 21, 22, 27, 29, 32-33, 37, 42, 49, 60, 65, 67, 77, 79-80, 85, 191-195, 203; Tweeter Compl. ¶¶ 11, 13, 16, 22, 25, 27, 35, 40, 45, 50, 52, 62-65, 69, 79, 171, 175-78, 180, 189; Best Buy Compl. ¶¶ 11, 13-16, 20-21, 27, 29, 37, 42, 47, 54-57, 61, 81, 176, 180-185, 194, 238; P.C. Richard Compl. ¶¶ 11, 14-15, 17-18, 21, 24, 27, 29, 37, 42, 47, 52, 54, 64-67, 71, 81, 173, 177-80, 182, 191, 238, 246, 247, 248, 249.
The Court ADOPTS the Special Master's recommendation on this point, as modified above, and DENIES Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' state law claims on due process grounds. This does not mean that future due process challenges are foreclosed, pending the discovery of additional facts.
iii. Joint Motion to Dismiss Based on Prudential Standing
Defendants argued that DAPs' state law claims failed to meet the requirements of prudential standing: (1) plaintiffs must assert their own legal rights and interests, not those of others'; (2) courts will not adjudicate generalized grievances; and (3) plaintiffs' claims must "fall within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated by the statute or constitutional guarantee in question." Defs.' Joint Mot. at 21 (citing Valley Forge Christian Coll. v. Americans United for Separation of Church & State, Inc., 454 U.S. 464, 474-75 (1982)). While the Special Master found that the DAPs asserted their own legal rights and did not bring generalized grievances, he made no finding as to the "zone of interests" factor. R&R at 7-8. Rather, he concluded that Defendants' request for dismissal was too broad and general because it did not demonstrate which of the DAPs' claims, and under the laws of which states, were allegedly deficient. Id. at 8. He recommended that the Court deny Defendants' motion on this point, because it would not be supported by the record and could sweep too broadly.
Defendants object to the R&R's recommendations, arguing that they specifically identified the DAPs' state law claims in Appendix C to their original motion to dismiss and that those claims are insufficient to establish that the DAPs purchased CRT Products in the relevant states. Defs.' Joint Obj'ns at 11; Defs.' Joint MTD App'x C. Specifically, Defendants argue that one group of DAPs did not allege purchases of CRT Products in states where they filed claims, and another asserted only conclusory or insufficient allegations that they purchased CRT Products in the relevant states. Id. at 12-16.
The DAPs ask the Court to adopt the R&R, arguing that Defendants' arguments about the "zone of interests" are the same as their due process arguments and should be dismissed for the same reasons. DAP Mot. to Adopt at 7.
The DAPs are right. Defendants' arguments repeat their due process arguments. Those arguments fail both here and there. See Section IV.B.iii supra. The Court finds that the DAPs' pleadings satisfy the prudential standing requirements. Defendants' motion is DENIED on these grounds, and the Court ADOPTS the Special Master's R&R on this point, though the Court MODIFIES the Special Master's recommendation on the zone of interest.
iv. Joint Motion to Dismiss Based on Associated General Contractors
Defendants move to dismiss the DAPs' claims for lack of standing under California, Washington, Arizona, Illinois, and Michigan law, arguing that dismissal is required under Associated General Contractors v. California State Counsel of Carpenters ("AGC"), 459 U.S. 519 (1983). Defs.' MTD at 23-25. The DAPs concede that AGC applies to their California and Washington claims, but they argue that AGC does not apply to their Arizona, Michigan, and Illinois claims. DAP Opp'n at 26.
AGC established a multi-factor test for determining whether a given plaintiff is a proper party to bring a private antitrust action. 459 U.S. at 535, 537-44 & n.1. The factors are: "(1) the nature of the plaintiff's alleged injury; that is, whether it was the type the antitrust laws were intended to forestall; (2) the directness of the injury; (3) the speculative measure of the harm; (4) the risk of duplicative recovery; and (5) the complexity in apportioning damages." Id. at 535; see also Lucas Auto. Eng'g, Inc. v. Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., 140 F.3d 1228, 1232 (9th Cir. 1998) (citing AGC).
Defendants contend that AGC applies to the DAPs' claims under Arizona, Illinois, and Michigan law, and that the DAPs have not satisfied the AGC factors for those states' claims. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 4-15. The DAPs respond that AGC should not apply to any of those claims. The Special Master concluded on this point that the DAPs do not participate in the market that they allege was restrained, since they only pled that the CRTs themselves were price-fixed, and they participated only in the CRT Products market. R&R at 10. For this reason, he found that the DAPs do not meet the "antitrust injury" factor of the AGC analysis. Id. He therefore recommended that the DAPs' allegations under the antitrust laws of California, Illinois, Michigan, Arizona, and Washington be dismissed with leave to amend so that the DAPs can file an amended complaint adequately alleging standing under AGC. Id. at 11. Defendants now move to adopt the Special Master's recommendation, and the DAPs object.
In their objections to the Special Master's conclusion, the DAPs assert that under Ninth Circuit law, AGC is only applicable to state antitrust claims when there is "clear directive" from the state legislature or high court adopting AGC. DAP Reply: Joint at 3 (citing In re TFT-LCD, 586 F. Supp. 2d 1109, 1120-24 (N.D. Cal. 2008)). The DAPs claim that the Special Master erred in finding only that "existing state law, whether it is by the highest court or by an intermediate court, is the applicable authority." Id. (quoting R&R at 11) (emphasis in original). The DAPs therefore object to the Special Master's and Defendants' citations of intermediate appellate and other court decisions in support of AGC's application in this case -- they claim that absent a statement from a state's highest authority, the Court should abstain from applying AGC. Id. Defendants maintain that the Special Master's recommendation is correct, because the five states at issue here have all either applied AGC in intermediate appellate decisions on antitrust standing, or adopted harmonization provisions stating that their antitrust laws were to be construed in accordance with federal law. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 4-5 & nn. 1-2.
The DAPs' argument that Ninth Circuit law requires more than an intermediate appellate case to apply AGC to a state claim is based partly on the Court's decision in In re CRT, 738 F. Supp. 2d at 1023. That opinion did not stand for that proposition, and did not analyze the same arguments the parties raise here. The Ninth Circuit sets forth clear guidance on this matter: on questions of state law, federal courts are bound by that state's highest court's decision, but if that court has not decided an issue, the federal court is to follow relevant intermediate appellate precedent unless the federal court finds convincing evidence that the state's supreme court would not follow it. Id. (citing United Broth, of Carpenters & Joiners of Am. Local 586 v. NLRB, 540 F.3d 957, 963 (9th Cir. 2008); Ryman v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 505 F.3d 993, 994 (9th Cir. 2007); Dimidowich v. Bell & Howell, 803 F.2d 1473, 1483 (9th Cir. 1986)).
The DAPs alternatively claim that Defendants fail to show that AGC would be applied in the state courts of Michigan, Arizona, or Illinois. First, they argue that the Michigan cases Defendants cite are not published or precedentially binding. DAP Reply: Joint at 4-5 (citing Michigan Court Rule 7.215(C)). Second, they contend that Arizona's Supreme Court has held that AGC is not necessary to determine indirect purchasers' standing in state antitrust law claims, and also that Arizona's harmonization provision is permissive, not mandatory. Id. at 5-6 (citing Bunker's Glass Co. v. Pilkington PLC, 75 P.3d 99, 102, 133 (Ariz. 2003)). Finally, they claim that the Illinois cases Defendants cite did not involve AGC at all, and that an Illinois federal district court held AGC inapplicable under Illinois law. Id. at 6 (citing In re Aftermarket Filters Antitrust Litig., No. 08 C 4883, 2009 WL 3754041, at *7 (N.D. Ill. Nov. 5, 2009)).
The Court is not convinced by all of the DAPs' arguments. First, while under Michigan's Court Rules an unpublished decision is not necessarily binding under the principle of stare decisis, such a decision is not worthless, especially if a higher court has not spoken. The DAPs argue that the Court should ignore those unpublished opinions based on People v. Reid, 233 Mich. App. 457, 474 (Mich. Ct. App. 1999). But that case states only that it is inappropriate for another Michigan court to consider an unpublished opinion (which was later overruled) substantively binding. Id. The Court does not find this sufficient to ignore Ninth Circuit law on how the Court is to address these issues. The Court has no conclusive evidence that the Michigan Supreme Court would overrule an intermediate appellate court's adoption of AGC, so the lower court decisions Defendants cite are the Court's best guidance now. Since that court adopted AGC, the Court sees no reason to hold that Michigan law forbids doing so.
Second, the Court finds that the Arizona Supreme Court would not apply AGC. Bunker's Glass indicates that Arizona has chosen to provide broader protection to its citizens by allowing indirect purchasers to bring antitrust suits under Arizona state law. 75 P.3d at 110. Further, even though the Arizona Supreme Court held that while Arizona courts are free to follow more restrictive federal laws on standing, that court itself declined to do so, based largely on its understanding that the Arizona Constitution and Arizona antitrust laws were designed to allow for more standing than federal law. Id. at 102-03, 110. Therefore, even though an intermediate appellate court in Arizona opted to apply AGC standing, the Court finds that the Arizona Supreme Court would not likely follow the same course. The sparse reasoning from the trial court in Luscher v. Bayer AG, No. CV-2004-014835 (Ariz. Super. Ct. Sept. 14, 2005), is not persuasive when compared to the higher authority of Bunker's Glass. Accordingly, the DAPs who rely on Arizona law are not required to meet AGC standing requirements.
Finally, the Court finds the DAPs' arguments about Illinois law unconvincing. For example, the DAPs cite In re Aftermarket Filters as having found AGC inapplicable to claims brought under Illinois law, but that conclusion was based on the court's rejection of the defendants' argument that the two classes of purchasers participated in markets separate from the direct and indirect purchasers. 2009 WL 3754041, at *7. The court did not reject AGC because some aspect of Illinois law required doing so. And while the DAPs are right that neither of Defendants' other two cases directly apply the AGC factors, neither states that AGC is inapplicable, and both suggest that it could apply in some cases. County of Cook v. Philip Morris, Inc., 817 N.E. 2d 1039, 1045 (Ill. App. Ct. 2004), cites AGC approvingly, and O'Regan v. Arbitration Forums, Inc., 121 F.3d 1060, 1066 (7th Cir. 1997), states clearly that federal antitrust standing rules apply under the Illinois Antitrust Act. In this setting, the Court finds no convincing evidence that the Illinois Supreme Court would not apply AGC. Therefore the Special Master was correct in finding that AGC applies to the DAPs' Illinois claims.
The question remains whether the DAPs meet AGC's requirements. The Special Master found that they failed to do so because, as purchasers of CRT Products but not CRTs themselves, they were not participants in the same allegedly restrained market and therefore could not demonstrate injury appropriate for antitrust standing under AGC. R&R at 10-11. The Special Master concluded that, since antitrust injury is essential to AGC's multi-factor analysis, the DAPs fail to show standing based on the absence of that single, significant factor. Id. at 11 (citing Bhan v. NME Hosp., Inc., 772 F.2d 1467, 1370 n.3 (9th Cir. 1985) ("[T]he inquiry whether the plaintiff has suffered an injury of the type which the antitrust statute was intended to forestall is a factor of tremendous significance.")). The DAPs disagree, arguing that in the Ninth Circuit, courts have "embraced antitrust standing in cases involving component parts and their corresponding finished products." DAPs' Reply: Joint at 7.
The DAPs cite to the Court's earlier order in this case finding that the Direct Purchasers and Indirect Purchasers had adequately pled antitrust standing. In re CRT, 738 F. Supp. 2d at 1023-25. The Special Master considered the DAPs' arguments and found a distinction: in that case, the alleged conspiracy involved both CRTs themselves and CRT Products, while the DAPs' complaints concern only the CRTs themselves. R&R at 10 (citing Tr. 18-19). The Special Master found that "[t]here is a real market distinction, and hence a real legal distinction, between the finished products and just the CRTs," and concluded that a complaint that embraces only one of the two allegedly intertwined products fails to show that an antitrust injury occurred within the same allegedly restrained market. Id.
Defendants argue that the Special Master correctly found that the DAPs' pleadings foreclosed the possibility of an antitrust injury, and that the DAPs "have not alleged that the cost or price of standalone CRT tubes are components that 'can easily be traced' through relevant distribution channels, or that standalone CRT[s] account for a specific percentage of the cost of manufacturing the finished product." Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 11-12. The DAPs respond, however, that regardless of what the pleadings say, the market for CRTs themselves and CRT Products remain inextricably intertwined. DAP Reply: Joint at 7-9. Further, the DAPs note that their complaint alleges that CRTs are discrete, identifiable parts of the CRT Product's supply chain, such that any CRT-related prices and overcharges can be traced along with the physical CRT down a chain of causation from allegedly anticompetitive conduct to antitrust injury. Id. at 9 & n. 7 (citing relevant complaints).
The Court finds that, for purposes of the present motion, the DAPs have sufficiently pled an antitrust injury, and that this factor slightly favors standing. The Court finds that where a product like a CRT itself is virtually valueless on its own, and the markets for CRTs themselves and CRT products are plausibly pled to be inextricably intertwined, a plaintiff adequately pleads an antitrust injury when the alleged anticompetitive activity surrounding a component affects the market for the finished product in a traceable way. See, e.g., In re Flash Memory Antitrust Litig., 643 F. Supp. 2d 1133, 1154 (N.D. Cal. 2009); In re GPU Antitrust Litig., 540 F. Supp. 2d 1085, 1098 (N.D. Cal. 2007). Accordingly, the Court respectfully declines to adopt the R&R on this point.
The next step is to evaluate the other factors of AGC and balance them. The first factor, discussed above, is very significant but not dispositive. The second factor of AGC concerns the directness of the DAPs' alleged injury. Defendants argue that the DAPs' allegations fail to support a causal connection between the allegedly anticompetitive and the claimed harm. See Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 14. Their argument on this point, like their argument for the remaining factors, is essentially a rehash of their arguments about the differences between the markets for CRTs themselves and for CRT Products. See id. at 14-15. The Court has already found that the link between the two markets is enough, at least at this stage, to make an allegation of antitrust harm plausible. The Court finds that the DAPs' allegations of traceable overcharges, given the severability of CRTs from CRT Products, are sufficient to favor standing under this factor. Whether or not the DAPs can actually prove that an overcharge would be passed down the chain is a factual question for a later motion.
The third factor considers the speculative nature of the alleged harm. As above, Defendants claim that the DAPs' allegations of injury are "inherently speculative," since there is no secondary market for CRTs themselves and mere allegations of pass-on damages are insufficient to show non-speculative damages. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 15 (citing In re DRAM Antitrust Litig., 516 F. Supp. 2d 1072, 1092 (N.D. Cal. 2007)). In In re DRAM, this Court found that plaintiffs alleging injury related to purportedly price-fixed Dynamic Random Access Memory ("DRAM") lacked standing as to their purchases of DRAM in the form of a component product, since tracing the price-fixed DRAM through the component products would have been too attenuated in that case. 516 F. Supp. 2d at 1092-93. In this case, as a pleading matter, the Court finds that the DAPs sufficiently allege that overcharges are passed on to CRT Product purchasers in a traceable way, since the market and physical distribution chain for CRTs are both limited. Moreover, absent a more developed factual record, the Court finds it inappropriate to determine "complex and intensely factual" damages issues without "a more fully developed factual record." See In re GPU, 540 F. Supp. 2d at 1098. The Court makes the same findings as to traceability and apportionability under the fourth and fifth factors, which can be condensed and considered alongside each other. See, e.g., AGC, 459 U.S. at 544.
Accordingly, the Court finds that the DAPs meet AGC's standing requirements. As noted above, the DAPs have conceded that the principles of AGC apply in California and Washington, and the Court has found that Arizona does not apply AGC but allows for suits of the DAPs' type. Therefore, the Court respectfully declines to adopt the Special Master's recommendations on this point, and DENIES Defendants' motion on this issue.
v. Other Joint Motions Asserted
a. Massachusetts and Washington Consumer Protection Statutes
Defendants move to dismiss the DAPs' claims under Massachusetts's and Washington's consumer protection statutes.
1. Massachusetts
To bring a claim under the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act ("MCPA"), a plaintiff must first have served a written demand for relief on a defendant at least thirty days before filing the action if that defendant has a place of business or keeps assets in Massachusetts. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A §§ 2, 9. The Special Master, noting that the Court has dismissed earlier claims under Massachusetts law for failing to provide notice, found that the DAPs' case was similarly deficient. R&R at 12. He recommended that the Court dismiss the Massachusetts claims without leave to amend, because the DAPs do not plead or provide evidence showing that they provided the requisite statutory notice to any Massachusetts-linked Defendants. Id. Defendants ask the Court to adopt that recommendation. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 17-19. The DAPs claim that the Court should reject the Special Master's recommendation, arguing that thirty-seven of the thirty-nine Defendants are located outside Massachusetts and are not subject to the MCPA's notice requirement. DAP Reply: Joint at 12-13.
A review of the transcript, the parties' briefs, and the relevant case law reveals a serious factual question as to whether any of the DAPs ever sent notice (and whether, if sent, it was proper notice under the law). The complaints do not plead that any DAP bringing an MCPA claim sent notice, and the DAPs do not claim that they did. See DAP Reply: Joint at 12-13. The DAPs essentially put the burden on Defendants to show that they maintained a place of business or kept assets in Massachusetts. Id. To support this argument they cite a memorandum decision from a Massachusetts trial court. The Court is not convinced by this argument: the DAPs should have done their research and provided the requisite notice. However, to the extent that the DAPs claim that they can cure their pleading defect, the Court finds that the DAPs should have leave to amend their Massachusetts claims to show that they followed the law. The Court therefore ADOPTS the R&R on this point, as modified.
2. Washington
Washington forbids indirect purchasers from bringing their own actions under the Washington consumer protection statute. R&R at 12. The DAPs claim, however, that Washington's harmonization provision, Wash. Rev. Code § 19.86.920, requires the Court to evaluate claims under Washington law by applying Illinois Brick and finding that an exception to it applies here. DAP Reply: Joint at 14. Defendants argue that no case law or legislation supports the argument that Illinois Brick exceptions are applicable to claims under the Washington Consumer Protection Act. Neither party cites case law to support their position, and the Court declines to make law, especially since the R&R is sound and Washington law's prohibition of indirect actions would seem to override any suggestion of an Illinois Brick loophole being read into the state's harmonization provision. The Court ADOPTS the Special Master's recommendation and DISMISSES the DAPs' Washington law claims without leave to amend.
b. Common Laws of Unjust Enrichment
Some of the DAPs pled claims for unjust enrichment under the common law, not the unjust enrichment laws of particular states. The Special Master found, correctly, that the common law of unjust enrichment is not uniform and is subject to definition by the states. R&R at 13. He accordingly recommended that the Court dismiss these complaints with leave to amend, so that the DAPs have the opportunity to identify which states' laws support their unjust enrichment claims. The DAPs object to this recommendation, arguing that at least the Polaroid DAPs' unjust enrichment claims are specifically based on the laws of Minnesota and California. DAP Obj'ns: Joint at 19-20. Defendants move to adopt the recommendation of dismissal, arguing that the Polaroid DAPs never indicate under which state's law their claims arise, even though they were able to point to specific laws for other claims. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 21. Defendants claim that if the Court accepted the DAPs' argument, the DAPs would essentially be allowed to sidestep Rule 8's requirement that plaintiffs make short, plain statements of their claims. Id. at 21-22.
The Court agrees with Defendants and the Special Master. If any of the DAPs wanted to state claims for unjust enrichment under a particular state's law, they should have done so. The Court cannot infer what DAPs intended. The Court ADOPTS the Special Master's recommendation on this point and dismisses the Polaroid DAPs' unjust enrichment claims with leave to amend. Contrary to what the DAPs claim, requiring adherence to the rules of procedure is not unnecessary "make work." The DAPs need not file an amended complaint if they find it too onerous a task. The DAPs should, however, read the following section carefully in considering whether to amend their complaints for unjust enrichment claims.
c. California Restitution and Unjust Enrichment Laws
DAP Circuit City alleges that Defendants violated California's laws for restitution and unjust enrichment. Defendants moved to dismiss these claims because California law does not provide for standalone restitution or unjust enrichment claims. The Special Master noted correctly that California courts are divided on this issue, but recommended that these claims be dismissed without leave to amend, since California law provides specific and adequate remedies for these claims via the Cartwright Act. R&R at 13. The DAPs urge that the Court follow the line of cases allowing unjust enrichment and restitution to be pled as independent causes of action, arguing that the difference is merely semantic and that the Court should not determine the adequacy of alternative remedies at this stage of litigation. DAP Obj'ns: Joint at 20-21; DAP Reply: Joint at 14-17. Defendants move to adopt the Special Master's recommendation. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 23-26.
The Court agrees with Defendants and the Special Master that these equitable remedies are duplicative where the DAPs' statutory claims provide adequate relief at law. The Court ADOPTS the Special Master's recommendation and DISMISSES Circuit City's restitution and unjust enrichment claims without leave to amend.
d. California's UCL
Defendants move to dismiss the Circuit City, CompuCom, and Polaroid DAPs' claims for alleged violations of California's statutory Unfair Competition Law ("UCL"), Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §§ 17200 et seq. The Special Master recommended that this motion be dismissed because the DAPs' complaints allege antitrust violations (even if they are subject to exceptions or special applications), such that the Special Master could not conclude that no DAP alleged any valid antitrust claims on which they could predicate a UCL claim. R&R at 13. Neither party addresses this recommendation. The Court, having considered the briefs and the Special Master's R&R, ADOPTS the Special Master's recommendation and DENIES Defendants' motion to dismiss on these grounds.
e. State Laws Repealing Illinois Brick
Defendants move to dismiss the DAPs' state law claims under Nebraska, Nevada, and New York law, arguing that the DAPs cannot sue for purchases prior to the date that those states passed statutes repealing Illinois Brick. The DAPs concede that they lack standing under New York law based on purchases prior to December 3, 1998, so the Special Master recommended that the Court dismiss those claims with prejudice. R&R at 14. The Court ADOPTS that recommendation and DISMISSES the DAPs' New York claims based on pre-December 3, 1998 purchases with prejudice.
As to Nebraska and Nevada, the Special Master noted that the Court has already held that indirect purchasers lack standing under those states' laws for purchases predating Nebraska's and Nevada's respective Illinois Brick repeal statutes. Id. (citing In re CRT, 738 F. Supp. 2d at 1025). Since the DAPs cited no new reasons why the Court should not apply the same analysis in this case, the Special Master recommended that the Court dismiss with prejudice the DAPs' claims based on purchases predating Nebraska's and Nevada's repeal statutes. The DAPs dispute this recommendation, arguing that recent cases offer new interpretations of the DAPs' arguments. See DAP Obj'ns: Joint at 22-23.
First, the DAPs argue that the Court is bound by Arthur v. Microsoft Corp., 676 N.W.2d 29 (Neb. 2004), in which the Nebraska Supreme Court reversed dismissal of claims predating Nebraska's 2002 repealer statute. DAP Reply: Joint at 18-20. On this point, the DAPs contend that the Court should follow Judge Illston's decision from In re TFT-LCD Antitrust Litigation, No. M 07-1827 SI, C 10-4945 SI, 2011 WL 3738985, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 24, 2011), which held that even though Arthur considered claims brought under Nebraska's Consumer Protection Act, its reasoning extends to Nebraska antitrust claims, since Arthur indicated that Nebraska law was never meant to be harmonized with Illinois Brick. Defendants cite several cases and a section of judicial history, which to them suggests that Nebraska's 2002 amendment of its antitrust law to provide indirect-purchaser standing meant that no such standing existed before 2002. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 27-28. The Court disagrees, based on the clear language from Arthur and Judge Illston's reasoning in In re TFT-LCD. The Court's prior ruling on this issue is not law of the case, since the Indirect Purchaser Plaintiffs ("IPPs") did not object to the Special Master's recommendation of a dismissal of the pre-2002 Nebraska claims, and so the issue was neither briefed nor fully discussed by the Special Master or the Court. There was, essentially, no controversy before the Court at that time. The Court therefore respectfully declines to adopt the R&R on this point, and DENIES Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' Nebraska claims based on pre-2002 purchases.
Second, the DAPs argue that the Court should read Nevada's 1999 amendment as merely clarifying who may bring suit under the Nevada Unfair Trade Practices Act, not as changing the standing requirements to require indirect purchasers to sue for their antitrust injuries. DAP Reply: Joint at 20-21. Defendants claim that legislative history supports the interpretation that the statute meant to cut off claims for purchases made before 1999, and that Nevada's high court presumes that statutes apply prospectively and that the legislature intends to change (not just clarify) law when it amends statutes. Defs.' Joint Mot. to Adopt at 30-31 (citing In re Estate of Thomas, 998 P.2d 560, 562 (Nev. 2000); McKay v. Bd. of Supervisors, 730 P.2d 438, 442 (Nev. 1986)).
The Court agrees with Defendants. As Judge Illston held in In re TFT-LCD, the Nevada Unfair Trade Practices Act ("UTPA") has a harmonization provision, Nev. Rev. Stat. § 598A.050, and the Nevada Supreme Court would likely interpret the UTPA "in harmony" with Illinois Brick. In re TFT-LCD, 2011 WL 3738985, at *3. The Court finds no convincing high court evidence to the contrary, and is not persuaded by the lower court cases that the DAPs cite. The Court ADOPTS the R&R on this point and GRANTS Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' Nevada claims based on purchases that occurred before October 1, 1999.
C. Philips and LG's Separate Joint Motion to Dismiss
The Philips and LG Defendants filed a separate joint motion to dismiss the DAPs' complaints. See Philips MTD at 5-14; LG Joinder at 1-2. The critical differences in this motion concern Philips and LG's joint venture, LGDP (a.k.a. "LP Displays" or "LPD"). According to the DAPs' complaints, Philips transferred its entire CRT business to LGDP in the form of a 50/50 joint venture with LG. E.g., Best Buy Compl. ¶ 46. At this point, Philips's only connection to the alleged cartel was through LGDP. Id. ¶ 150. In January 2006, LGDP went bankrupt. R&R at 15. In March or April 2007, it "became an independent company," and its shares were "owned by financial institutions and private equity firms," not by Philips or LG. Best Buy Compl. ¶¶ 36, 40; R&R at 15.
Obviously, there are multiple complaints in this particular matter, but the Special Master used Best Buy's complaint as an exemplar and the parties do the same. So will the Court.
The Special Master found that the January 2006 bankruptcy and March 2007 divestment amounted to Philips and LG's withdrawal from the alleged conspiracy. R&R at 14-15. Further, the Special Master found that the DAPs had failed to show that the relevant state and federal statutes of limitations should be tolled, because they had failed to sufficiently allege fraudulent concealment. Id. at 15. According to the Special Master, the DAPs have had the benefit of four years of pleadings, motions, and discovery in this case, and so a conclusory pleading of fraudulent concealment, addressed to all Defendants generally but not the unusual circumstances of Philips and LG particularly, was insufficient. Id. Accordingly, the Special Master recommended that the Court dismiss the DAPs' state and federal claims against Philips and LG.
Philips and LG ask the Court to adopt that recommendation, but they claim that they actually withdrew from the conspiracy by June 2001, when they ceased participating directly in the CRT market and formed LGPD. See Philips Mot. to Adopt at 1-3. According to Philips and LG, this would bar all of the DAPs' state and federal claims on statute of limitations grounds. Id. at 17-33. Specifically, Philips and LG contend that even if the Court found cross-jurisdictional tolling applicable based on the DPP Class's November 2007 filing -- which they argue the Court should not do -- the June 2001 date is still outside any applicable limitations period. Id. at 23-24. Philips and LG also state that since the DAPs fail to plead fraudulent concealment as to Philips and LG in particular, no possible tolling argument can save any of the DAPs' claims. Id. at 18-22, 29-33.
The DAPs claim that the Special Master erred in finding that Philips and LG withdrew from the conspiracy and by finding that the DAPs failed to allege fraudulent concealment. DAP Obj'ns: Philips & LG at 6-14. The DAPs also argue that their federal claims and state law claims were tolled as of November 26, 2007, and that cross-jurisdictional tolling would extend the DAPs' claims back to November 2003. Id. at 14-17.
The Court finds that the parties' withdrawal and fraudulent concealment arguments raise factual questions inappropriate for decision at this stage. Too many of the parties' arguments depend on the resolution of factual disputes about Philips and LG's stakes in LPD, the actual involvement of Philips and LG in LPD and the conspiracy, and so forth. The Court finds that the DAPs' allegations of fraudulent concealment, in context, are sufficient under Rule 9(b). Indeed, in a highly complex, long-running antitrust conspiracy case like this one, it is likely that further information about the extent of two parties' involvement is in those parties' hands, awaiting discovery (or potentially not). "[I]t is generally inappropriate to resolve the fact-intensive allegations of fraudulent concealment at the motion to dismiss stage, particularly when the proof relating to the extent of the fraudulent concealment is alleged to be largely in the hands of the alleged conspirators." In re Rubber Chems. Antitrust Litig., 504 F. Supp. 2d 777, 789 (N.D. Cal. 2007). Similarly, the withdrawal dispute hinges on facts about Philips and LG's involvement in their joint venture, and the Court cannot resolve such a dispute at this point. Id. at 1025. Accordingly, the Court respectfully declines to adopt the R&R on this point, and denies Defendants' motion. The Court also declines to address American Pipe tolling at this time. See supra Section IV.b.i.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, the Court approves and adopts the Special Master's recommendation in part, and modifies it in part. As to the above-captioned Defendants' motions to dismiss the Direct Action Plaintiffs' complaints, the Court ORDERS as follows:
• Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' Complaints is GRANTED to the extent that it challenges the DAPs' alleged right to proceed under the "cost-plus" and "co-conspirator" exceptions to Illinois Brick.
• Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' Complaints is DENIED to the extent that it challenges the DAPs' right to proceed under the "ownership or control" exception to Illinois Brick, but this Order expresses no view as to whether the DAPs will be able to prove what is needed to establish that exception with respect to their purchases of finished products containing CRTs. Defendants' joint motion to dismiss does not presently challenge the adequacy of the DAPs' allegations of ownership or
control, and the Court makes no ruling on that issue. Defendants' joint motion does not presently raise the issue of the application of the statute of limitations to the federal claims.
• Defendants' joint motion to dismiss the DAPs' claims based on state statutes of limitation is DENIED.
• Defendants' joint motion to dismiss the DAPs' claims based on prudential standing is DENIED.
• Defendants' joint motion to dismiss the DAPs' claims based on due process is DENIED.
• Defendants' joint motion to dismiss the DAPs' state law claims based on Associated General Contractors is DENIED.
• The DAPs' Massachusetts claims under the state consumer protection statute are DISMISSED with leave to amend.
• The DAPs' claims brought under Washington law are DISMISSED with prejudice.
• The DAPs' claims for common law unjust enrichment are DISMISSED with leave to amend, with the limitations described above.
• The DAPs' claims for restitution and unjust enrichment under California law are DISMISSED with prejudice.
• Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' UCL claims is DENIED.
• The DAPs' New York claims based on pre-December 3, 1998 purchases are DISMISSED with prejudice.
• Defendants' motion to dismiss the DAPs' claims under Nebraska law based on pre-2002 purchases is DENIED.
• The DAPs' Nevada law claims that are premised on
purchases predating October 1, 1999, are DISMISSED with prejudice.If the DAPs choose to file amended complaints for any of the claims noted above, they must do so within thirty (30) days of this Order's signature date. Failure to do so may result in the deficient claims' dismissal with prejudice.
• Philips and LG's motion to dismiss the DAPs' claims as to them is DENIED.
• Per the Special Master's recommendation, given the profusion of underlying motions and arguments regarding these Defendants' motions to dismiss the DAP Complaints, any motions from these parties' briefs that were not discussed in this Order or the R&R are DENIED without prejudice.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE