Jim Cain v. Air Cargo, Inc.

599 F.2d 316, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 13684
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1979
Docket77-1461
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 599 F.2d 316 (Jim Cain v. Air Cargo, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Cain v. Air Cargo, Inc., 599 F.2d 316, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 13684 (9th Cir. 1979).

Opinion

GOODWIN, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs appeal from summary judgment in favor of defendants Air Cargo, Inc. (“ACI”), and City Freight Lines (“City Freight”) in an antitrust action with pendent claims under California state law and the Fourteenth Amendment. We affirm the summary judgment disposing of the pendent claims, but reverse and reinstate the claims under the Sherman and Clayton Acts, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 et seq.

Plaintiffs are independent truckers operating in the Los Angeles area, exempt from interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) regulation under 49 U.S.C. § 303(b)(8) as commercial-zone haulers. Defendant ACI is a corporation organized in 1947 by an agreement among 17 national air carriers, 1 who established ACI as their agent to provide ground freight service to and from airports they serve incident to air freight carriage. The agreement empowered ACI to provide the cartage service itself, or to contract with local haulers for the service. 2

Under Section 412 of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 (49 U.S.C. § 1382), 3 the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) approved the 1947 agreement establishing ACI (CAB Agreement No. 1041). Rather than provide the service itself, ACI has usually chosen to contract with a single local hauler at each airport to provide cartage to and from the airlines. ACI’s stock is owned by the member airlines, and its revenues are derived from a flat fee collected on each shipment carried by the contract trucker. Until 1962, the CAB also approved under Section 412 the standard form agreement that ACI negotiates with local truckers; the CAB dropped its filing requirement in 1962. 4

Award of an ACI contract does not guarantee to a contractor all of the trucking *318 business incident to airline freight carriage. To arrange shipment of his goods to the airport, a shipper is free to call local carriers, like plaintiffs, who do not have an ACI contract. If the shipper calls an airline to arrange shipment, however, the order is routed through ACI to its designated carrier. When the goods arrive at the destination airport after air shipment, they will be delivered locally by the ACI carrier at the other end, except in the rare case where the shipper has arranged for a different local trucker to pick up the goods in the destination city.

The ACI contract thus ensures for its holder a large volume of airport hauling. In the instant case, for example, ACI until 1975 had contracts for cartage in the closest zones surrounding Los Angeles International Airport with two truckers, City Freight and Atlantic Transfer Company (“Atlantic”). The contracts, plaintiffs assert, gave the two companies a total of almost 100 percent of the hauling from the airport and 80 percent of the cartage to the airport related to air shipment. The independent truckers with whom City Freight and Atlantic competed, such as plaintiffs here, together had the other 20 percent of the business going to the airport.

In 1975, because of financial reverses suffered by its parent corporation, Atlantic was sold to City Freight. The sale did not include Atlantic’s current ACI contract, but shortly thereafter ACI awarded the Atlantic contract to City Freight’s new “Atlantic Transfer Division”, as City Freight renamed Atlantic after the purchase. Thus City Freight alone now carries some 80 percent of the ground freight to the Los Angeles airport and practically all of that leaving it, incident to air freight shipment.

Following ACI’s award of the Atlantic contract to City Freight, plaintiff independent truckers brought suit against City Freight and ACI. The complaint charges ACI and City Freight with conspiratorial refusal to deal and exclusive dealing, in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act; City Freight with attempt to monopolize and monopolization, under Section 2 of the Sherman Act, and illegal acquisition of Atlantic under Section 7 of the Clayton Act; and ACI with violation of “California common law” and of Fourteenth Amendment due process.

The district court concluded, as a matter of law, that both ACI and City Freight were immune from antitrust liability under Section 414 of the Federal Aviation Act (49 U.S.C. § 1384), 5 6 because the CAB had approved Agreement No. 1041 under Section 412. The judge also concluded that Section 414 immunized defendants’ actions from state law claims, and that plaintiffs had no claim under the Fourteenth Amendment, as no state action was involved.

Plaintiffs objected that summary judgment was untimely. Had summary judgment not cut short discovery, they claim, they could have shown several antitrust violations on ACI’s and City Freight’s parts. They contend that City Freight only acquired Atlantic because of ACI’s assurance that it would not award Atlantic’s contract to a competing trucker; that ACI and City Freight had a mutual financial interest in assuring that the Atlantic contract was not awarded to a competitor of City Freight; and that the acquisition and contract award were undertaken by ACI and City Freight “with the conscious and parallel intent to lock up the existing Atlantic customers and maintain those customers as ACI accounts and to foreclose the independents from their opportunity to compete for Atlantic’s share of the relevant markets.”

*319 I.

We consider first the district court’s holding that ACI and City Freight are together immunized from plaintiffs’ Section 1 Sherman Act claims by Sections 412 and 414 of the Federal Aviation Act. Plaintiffs’ complaint is the latest in a lengthening line of antitrust attacks on the operations of ACI in awarding its local contracts to a single trucker. See, e. g., Scroggins v. Air Cargo, Inc., 534 F.2d 1124 (5th Cir. 1976); Big Bear Cartage, Inc. v. Air Cargo, Inc., 419 F.Supp. 982 (N.D.Ill.1976); Air Freight Haulage of Puerto Rico, Inc. v. American Airlines, Inc., 414 F.Supp. 1043 (D.P.R.1976), aff’d, 559 F.2d 1200 (1st Cir. 1977). In each case, the courts have held that Sections 412 and 414 shield both ACI and its contractor from antitrust scrutiny when the issue is solely ACI’s award of a contract. 6 Thus ACI may switch contractors (Scroggins) or may simply refuse to consider applications for a contract (Big Bear).

Sections 412 and 414 and the decisions construing these sections protected ACI and City Freight in the award of the Atlantic contract.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
599 F.2d 316, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 13684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-cain-v-air-cargo-inc-ca9-1979.