Baltimore Scrap Corp. v. David J. Joseph Co.

81 F. Supp. 2d 602, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84, 2000 WL 19256
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJanuary 6, 2000
DocketCIV. L-96-827
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 81 F. Supp. 2d 602 (Baltimore Scrap Corp. v. David J. Joseph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore Scrap Corp. v. David J. Joseph Co., 81 F. Supp. 2d 602, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84, 2000 WL 19256 (D. Md. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

LEGG, District Judge.

This is an antitrust suit. Before this Court are the defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Because the parties have extensively briefed the issues, the Court will dispense with a hearing. See Local Rule 105.6 (D.Md.1999). For the reasons stated herein, the Court will, by separate Order, grant the defendants’ motions and close the case.

*603 I. Introduction

Because of the complexity of the facts, a brief introduction may be useful. In 1991, the plaintiff, the Baltimore Scrap Company, (“Baltimore Scrap” or “BSC”), 1 proposed installing a new scrap metal shredder in the Fairfield section of Baltimore City. The proposal required zoning approval from the City. A coalition of citizens groups openly opposed the shredder on environmental grounds. The defendants, 2 who owned an existing shredder and did not welcome the competition, secretly set about to thwart BSC’s zoning application.

After initially rejecting it, the Board of Municipal Zoning Appeals (BMZA) approved Baltimore Scrap’s application on August 6, 1992. The defendants had standing to appeal the BMZA’s decision to the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. The defendants were concerned, however, that an appeal in their name, a competitor with a spotty environmental track record, would lack credibility. 3 The defendants decided that bankrolling an appeal by a citizens group, while masking their own involvement, presented a better strategy.

To carry out their plans, the defendants contacted an attorney and offered to pay him if he were, in turn, approached by the citizens groups. An employee of one of the defendants’ subsidiaries (Marlen Trading Company), posing as a “concerned local business,” approached the citizens groups, offering that if the citizens wished to pursue an appeal of the BMZA decision, Marlen would pay their legal costs, including attorneys’ fees. The employee also steered the citizens to the attorney whom the defendants had already contacted. The citizens groups accepted the offer. Neither Marlen nor the attorney told the citizens that the defendants, rather than an environmentally concerned local business, were behind the appeal.

Over the next seven months, the defendants were actively, albeit clandestinely, involved in the citizens’ appeal. The defendants paid the bills, reviewed the pleadings, and suggested strategies. Eventually, however, the defendants’ involvement in the zoning litigation came to light through what the parties refer to as the “errant fax.”

Ultimately, Baltimore Scrap’s application was successful and its shredder was built. BSC argues, however, that the appeal delayed the installation of the shredder by approximately eighteen months. Claiming fraud and violation of the antitrust laws, the plaintiff filed the instant suit.

The Court finds the defendants’ actions deceitful and underhanded. This is a conclusion reached not only by this Court, but also by the defendants’ own antitrust attorney. Concerned that their secret role in the zoning appeal might expose them to antitrust liability, the defendants consulted Richard Wertheimer, a partner at the Washington, DC law firm of Arnold & Porter. Wertheimer advised the defendants that their actions, while probably not illegal, were unworthy of a respectable business.

Although morally wrong, the defendants’ disguised role in the zoning appeal was not illegal. Under the Noerr-Pennington doctrine, a company may, even secretly and for anticompetitive purposes, sponsor a lawsuit against a competitor, so long as the lawsuit is neither a sham, meaning that it is not objectively baseless, nor fraudulent.

*604 The appeal was not sham litigation. Although ultimately unsuccessful, the citizens’ appeal raised bona fide legal issues, including (i) whether the citizens had standing to appeal, and (ii) whether the BMZA had used the appropriate legal standard in authorizing a zoning permit for the new shredder.

Nor do the defendants’ actions add up to fraud. The errant fax unmasked the defendants’ involvement in the litigation before the Circuit Court for Baltimore City had issued its final decision. Baltimore Scrap has not shown that the litigation would have been shorter had the courts known from the outset that the defendants were clandestinely financing and advising the appeal. Nor is there evidence that any judicial rulings were predicated upon the misassumption that the citizens, and the citizens alone, were pressing the appeal.

This Opinion is not meant to condone the defendants’ tactics. The Court agrees with Attorney Wertheimer that the defendants’ actions were unworthy of a legitimate business. At the same time, however, the Court finds that the defendants’ actions fell short of violating the antitrust laws.

II. Factual Background

A. Litigation Timeline

The following summarizes the major events in the history of the zoning litigation:

July 1991: Baltimore Scrap Company leased Carbon Avenue junk yard site.

November 25,1991: BMZA rejected BSC’s application for a construction permit. Vote was 3-1 in favor of issuing the permit, but four votes were required for approval.

August 6,1992: BMZA approved BSC’s second application for a construction permit. The Board found the second application substantially different from the first. The language of the Board’s decision appeared to classify the proposed shredder as a material recovery facility (MIRF). Such a classification would be incorrect, because a MIRF: (i) is not authorized to accept certain types of metal which the shredder was to process, and (ii) must be contained in an enclosed facility.

August 27,1992: Citizens groups, represented by David Irwin, filed an appeal of the BMZA’s decision in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.

October 13,1992: Gloria Sipes moved to intervene as a plaintiff in the zoning appeal. Shortly thereafter, BSC moved to dismiss the zoning appeal, arguing the citizens groups lacked standing and Sipes's Motion to Intervene was time-barred.

December 7,1992: Hearing on procedural motions held before Judge Thomas Ward. Judge Ward granted Ms. Sipes’s Motion to Intervene and denied BSC’s Motion to Dismiss.

January 7,1993: Hearing on the merits of the zoning appeal held before Chief Judge Robert I.H. Ham-merman. Chief Judge Hammerman approved of Judge Ward’s procedural rulings. He further ruled that substantial evidence supported the Board’s conclusion that the 1992 application was substantially different from the first. He remanded the case to the BMZA, however, so that the Board could explain why it had classified the shredder as a MIRF.

February 25,1993: Hearing before Chief Judge Hammerman on Baltimore Scrap’s motion to alter or amend judgment. BSC produced the Gadhia affidavit.

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81 F. Supp. 2d 602, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84, 2000 WL 19256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-scrap-corp-v-david-j-joseph-co-mdd-2000.