Howard Hess Dental Laboratories Inc. v. Dentsply International, Inc.

424 F.3d 363, 2005 WL 2291967
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 21, 2005
Docket04-1979, 04-1980
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 424 F.3d 363 (Howard Hess Dental Laboratories Inc. v. Dentsply International, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard Hess Dental Laboratories Inc. v. Dentsply International, Inc., 424 F.3d 363, 2005 WL 2291967 (3d Cir. 2005).

Opinion

AMBRO, Circuit Judge.

We consider consolidated appeals involving the same parties in two antitrust suits, Howard Hess Dental Laboratories, Inc. v. Dentsply International, Inc. (“Hess") and Jersey Dental Laboratories v. Dentsply International, Inc. (“Jersey Dental”) 1 Plaintiffs are dental laboratories who have brought these antitrust class actions on behalf of themselves and a class of similarly situated labs. Defendant Dentsply International, Inc. (“Dentsply”) markets artificial teeth used by the dental labs to make dentures. Plaintiffs allege, among other things, an exclusive-dealing conspiracy and a retail price-fixing conspiracy among Dentsply and its dealer-middlemen.

The District Court denied Plaintiffs standing to recover damages in both suits based primarily on Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, 431 U.S. 720, 97 S.Ct. 2061, 52 L.Ed.2d 707 (1977), which held that indirect purchaser plaintiffs do not have statutory standing to recover damages for “passed-on” overcharges. 2 We hold that Plaintiffs may not recover damages in Hess (a) under the “co-conspirator” exception to Illinois Brick, (b) under the “control” exception to Illinois Brick, (c) under a non-overcharge theory of damages, or (d) for “drop shipments.” While Plaintiffs may not recover damages under either the control exception or a lost profits theory in Jersey Dental, they do have statutory standing under the co-conspirator exception to pursue an action for overcharge damages (including for drop shipped teeth) caused by the alleged retail price-fixing conspiracy, although not for the alleged exclusive-dealing conspiracy.

Background

Plaintiffs allege the following in one or both of the complaints.

*367 (1) Manufacturers of artificial teeth need to distribute through dealers in order to compete effectively. Dealers are the primary source of distribution to dental labs, which use the teeth to produce dentures. Dentsply uses a network of authorized dealers.

(2) Plaintiffs have purchased Dentsply’s teeth both indirectly through Dentsply’s dealers and directly through “drop shipping.” Drop shipping occurs when a dealer does not have certain teeth in stock or cannot fulfill a lab’s order for some other reason and asks Dentsply to ship the teeth directly to a lab. When teeth are drop shipped, the dealer never has physical custody of them, but it does bill the lab for the teeth, collect payments from the lab, and pay Dentsply.

(3) Dentsply has foreclosed its competitors’ access to dealers by explicitly agreeing with some dealers that they will not carry certain competing brands of teeth and by inducing other dealers not to carry those competing brands of teeth. Pursuant to its written policy called “Dealer Criterion Number 6,” Dentsply threatens to terminate, and does terminate, dealers that add to their inventory teeth made by Dentsply’s competitors. Thus, unless Dentsply’s dealers were already selling another manufacturer’s teeth before Dents-ply imposed its exclusive-dealing policies, its dealers cannot sell other manufacturers’ teeth unless they give up the opportunity to continue to sell Dentsply’s teeth. No rational dealer would be likely to make such a switch because, given Dentsply’s monopoly position (it has a 75-80% market share on a revenue basis), losing the ability to sell Dentsply’s teeth would hurt a dealer more than gaining the ability to sell Dentsply’s competitors’ teeth would help a dealer. By explicitly agreeing with some dealers that they will not carry certain competing brands of teeth and by enacting Dealer Criterion Number 6, Dentsply has foreclosured its rivals’ access to adequate channels of distribution, and competition has been restricted. This has caused Dentsply’s market share to increase, the price of Dentsply’s and other manufacturers’ teeth to increase, and the availability of rival teeth to decrease.

(4) Furthermore, by agreement among Dentsply and its dealers, Dentsply sets the dealers’ resale prices. It distributes a list of “suggested” prices for its dealers to charge dental labs. Before a dealer can charge a lower price, Dentsply must approve this “price deviation.” Price deviations have been granted only when a lab has been buying, or is thinking of buying, a competitor’s teeth because they are being sold for less than those of Dentsply. In those instances, Dentsply negotiates with the lab to allow it to buy teeth from the dealer at a price below Dentsply’s suggested price. The dealer then agrees to the price negotiated by Dentsply.

(5) Dentsply’s foreclosing of its competitors’ access to dealers and setting of the dealers’ resale prices have caused Plaintiffs to purchase Dentsply’s teeth at artificially high prices and lose profits from unrealized sales of Dentsply’s competitors’ teeth.

Procedural History

In 1999, Plaintiffs filed the Hess suit against Dentsply alleging conspiracy to monopolize, attempt to monopolize, and maintenance of monopoly in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 2, and restraint of trade in violation of Section 3 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 14. Plaintiffs asked for both damages and an injunction. Dentsply moved for summary judgment, claiming that Plaintiffs lacked standing under Illinois Brick. The District Court granted Dentsply’s motion on Plaintiffs’ damages claims. The *368 Court reasoned that: (1) a co-conspirator exception to Illinois Brick did not apply because Plaintiffs had not joined Dents-ply’s dealers as co-defendants; (2) the control exception to Illinois Brick did not apply because Dentsply does not own its dealers; (3) Plaintiffs could not recover on a non-overcharge theory of damages because they had not articulated any such theory; and (4) Plaintiffs could not recover for drop shipments because they had specifically alleged that they were not direct purchasers, and even if they had alleged they were direct purchasers, they were indirect purchasers of drop shipments.

In 2001, Plaintiffs filed the Jersey Dental suit, this time naming as Dentsply’s co-defendants twenty-six of its then twenty-eight authorized dealers. Plaintiffs made substantially the same allegations as they did in Hess with one key addition: they claimed they were not only indirect purchasers but also direct purchasers. As in Hess, Plaintiffs asked for both damages and an injunction. Dentsply moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss the claims for damages, citing Illinois Brick. The District Court granted the motion. The Court reasoned that: (1) Plaintiffs could not recover under a co-conspirator exception to Illinois Brick because the suit still implicated Illinois Brick’s

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Bluebook (online)
424 F.3d 363, 2005 WL 2291967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-hess-dental-laboratories-inc-v-dentsply-international-inc-ca3-2005.