Gorman, Judge.
{¶ 1} The plaintiff-appellant, Maria Johnson, appeals from the order of the trial court dismissing her amended complaint against the defendant-appellee, Microsoft Corporation, under Civ.R. 12(B)(6). The amended complaint contained three counts: (1) a common-law claim for restitution alleging that Microsoft had charged a monopoly price for its Windows operating system; (2) a claim that Microsoft had violated Ohio’s version of the Valentine Act, R.C. 1331.01; and (3) a claim that Microsoft had violated two provisions of the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act, R.C. 1345.02 and 1345.03, by engaging in “unfair or deceptive” and “unconscionable acts” relating to a consumer sale. Johnson brought her claims as part of a putative class consisting of all those who had purchased a license to use any version of the Windows operating system within four years of her filing the complaint.
{¶ 2} In her single assignment of error, Johnson argues that she successfully stated claims under Ohio common law, the Valentine Act, and the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Background
{¶ 3} Johnson alleged that she had purchased a personal computer (“PC”) from a retail merchant, Gateway, and that the PC was loaded with the Windows 98 operating system. She further alleged that the Windows system on her new PC remained inoperable until it was out of the box and in her home, and that she used the PC to indicate her acceptance of an on-screen licensing agreement drafted by Microsoft and entitled “Microsoft End User License Agreement” (“EULA”). When she provided the obligatory acceptance, she alleged, she entered into a separate transaction with Microsoft.
{¶ 4} Johnson further alleged that Microsoft had obtained a monopoly in the market of PC operating systems. She alleged that Microsoft had used its superior position in the market to control price “free of the normal restraints faced in a competitive market.” She alleged that the price charged by Microsoft for the Windows operating system was a “monopoly price, far above the price that would be paid in a competitive market.”
{¶ 5} Johnson further alleged that Microsoft had erected barriers to competition. Her allegations focused primarily on Microsoft’s efforts to thwart competition from Navigator, a browser program introduced by Netscape Communications. She cited the action of the federal government and several states, including Ohio, in
United States v. Microsoft
(C.A.D.C.2001), 253 F.3d 34, which, she alleged, had resulted in findings that Microsoft had violated Ohio’s Valentine Act as well as the Sherman Antitrust Act, Section 2, Title 15, U.S.Code. She alleged that these findings had then been upheld in
New York v. Microsoft Corp.
(D.D.C.2002), 209 F.Supp.2d 132.
The Valentine Act
{¶ 6} Microsoft successfully argued in its motion to dismiss that the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois
(1977), 431 U.S. 720, 97 S.Ct. 2061, 52 L.Ed.2d 707, required a direct purchase from the company in order to confer standing upon Johnson to bring an action against it under Ohio’s version of the Valentine Act. Johnson argues, as she did below, that Microsoft’s reliance on
Illinois Brick
resulted from a false premise—that Ohio’s version of the Valentine Act must be interpreted in lockstep with the federal courts’ interpretation of the Sherman Act. According to Johnson, the legislative history of Ohio’s Valentine Act establishes the General Assembly’s intent to chart a different course—a course followed by the federal courts before
Illinois
Brick
—that provides indirect purchasers with standing to sue under antitrust laws. For the following reasons, we agree with the legal analysis propounded by Microsoft.
{¶ 7} Initially, we note that the weight of authority in this state is that the Valentine Act be interpreted consistently with federal antitrust law. The Ohio Supreme Court in
C.K. & J.K, Inc. v. Fairview Shopping Ctr. Corp.
(1980), 63 Ohio St.2d 201, 17 O.O.3d 124, 407 N.E.2d 507, stated that the statutes comprising the Act “were patterned after the Sherman Antitrust Act, and as a consequence this court has interpreted the statutory language in light of federal judicial construction of the Sherman Act * * Quoting from
Std. Oil Co. v. United States
(1911), 221 U.S. 1, 62, 31 S.Ct. 502, 55 L.Ed. 619, the court in
C.K.
indicated that violations of the Valentine Act were to be judged on the same basis as violations of the Sherman Act—in other words, on the basis that what was prohibited under the one was prohibited under the other. Id. The parallel construction
adopted by the court in
C.K.
was employed by this court in
Acme Wrecking Co., Inc. v. O’Rourke Constr. Co.
(Mar. 1,1995), 1st Dist. No. C-930856, 1995 WL 84188. In
Acme,
we applied to the Valentine Act the antitrust-injury requirement of the Clayton Act, Section 4, Title 15, U.S.Code, which permits a private civil cause of action to be brought by persons injured by conduct forbidden by the Sherman Act and other antitrust laws.
{¶ 8} Prior to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Illinois Brick,
and at the time that Ohio’s version of the Valentine Act was enacted, there was no direct-purchaser requirement for standing to bring a claim under the Valentine Act.
However, in 1977, the United States Supreme Court decided
Illinois
Brick
and imposed such a requirement. The court’s holding was a corollary of its earlier holding in
Hanover Shoe v. United Shoe Mach. Corp.
(1968), 392 U.S. 481, 88 S.Ct. 2224, 20 L.Ed.2d 1231. In
Hanover Shoe,
the court had held that middlemen could recover the full amount of a manufacturer’s illegal overcharge without any deduction for the amount of the illegal overcharge “passed-on” to the middlemen’s consumers. The court in
Illinois Brick
imposed the direct-purchaser standing requirement to avoid the possibility of duplicate recoveries by both middlemen and consumers created by
Hanover Shoe.
Id. at 725-748, 97 S.Ct. 2061, 52 L.Ed.2d 707. The court reasoned that treble-damage proceedings in actions brought by middlemen against the monopolist would be greatly complicated and rendered less effective if they were forced to include an analysis of how much of the illegal overcharge of the monopolist was absorbed by the middlemen and how much was then passed on to the consumer. Id. at 745-747, 97 S.Ct. 2061, 52 L.Ed.2d 707. The court wished to avoid the difficulties and uncertainties of measuring, tracing, and apportioning damages between the two groups (middlemen and consumers) based upon pass-on theories. Further, the court expressed its concern that the dispersion of damages among a much larger group of plaintiffs that included individual consumers would lessen the incentive to sue for such a diluted individual recovery. Id. at 745-746, 97 S.Ct. 2061, 52 L.Ed.2d 707.
{¶ 9} After
Illinois Brick,
the court in
California v. ARC Am. Corp.
(1989), 490 U.S. 93, 109 S.Ct. 1661, 104 L.Ed.2d 86, held that states were not obligated to impose their own direct-purchaser standing requirement upon state antitrust laws. The court reiterated that
Illinois Brick
was intended to interpret only federal antitrust laws, and that state antitrust statutes conferring standing upon indirect purchasers were not preempted by federal law. Id. at 101, 105-106, 109 S.Ct. 1661, 104 L.Ed.2d 86. Nonetheless, a majority of state courts that have considered the issue in the absence of legislative intervention have followed a course of parallel federal-state construction and incorporated
Illinois Brick’s
direct-purchaser requirement into their states’ versions of the Valentine Act. See
Pomerantz v. Microsoft Corp.
(Colo.App.2002), 50 P.3d 929;
Vacco v. Microsoft Corp.
(2002), 260 Conn. 59, 793 A.2d 1048;
Hindman v. Microsoft Corp.
(July 20, 2000), Hawaii Dist. Ct. No. 00-1-0945;
Berghausen v. Microsoft Corp.
(2002), 765 N.E.2d 592;
Arnold v. Microsoft
(2001), Ky.App. No. 2000-CA-002144-MR, 2001 WL 1835377;
Davidson v. Microsoft Corp.
(2002), 143 Md.App. 43, 792 A.2d 336;
O’Connell v. Microsoft Corp.
(June 14, 2001), Mass. Sup.Ct. No. CA 0001743, 2001 WL 893525;
Ireland v. Microsoft Corp.
(Jan. 24, 2001), Mo. Cir. Ct. No. OOCV-201515, 2001 WL 1868946;
Arthur v. Microsoft Corp.
(June 25, 2003), Neb. No.
S—01—1325;
Krotz v. Microsoft Corp.
(June 19, 2000), Nev. Dist. Ct. No. A41631;
Minuteman, LLC v. Microsoft Corp.
(2002), 147 N.H. 634, 795 A.2d 833;
Major v. Microsoft Corp.
(Okla.App.2002), 60 P.3d 511;
Daraee v. Microsoft Corp.
(June 27, 2000), Ore. Cir. Ct. No. 0004-03311, 2000 WL 33187306;
Siena v. Microsoft Corp.
(R.I.2002), 796 A.2d 461; and
Weinberg v. Microsoft Corp.
(Aug. 18, 2002), Tex. Dist. Ct. No. D-162, 526.
{¶ 10} Of equal significance, although some 26 states and the District of Columbia do allow for some form of indirect-purchaser actions, 23 of these jurisdictions do so only because of
Illinois Brick
repealer statutes passed by their respective legislatures. Many of these repealer statutes, in turn, limit indirect-purchase actions to the state attorney general as parens patriae.
{¶ 11} Ohio is not among the states that have passed an
Illinois Brick
repealer statute. Still, Johnson argues that, despite the weight of authority to the contrary,
Illinois Brick’s
direct-purchaser requirement should not be applied to Ohio’s Valentine Act. The reason, Johnson argues, is that the Ohio legislature never manifested an intent that the Act would be subject to evolving federal antitrust law. To support this argument, Johnson isolates the following language in
List v. Burley Tobacco Growers’ Co-op. Assn.
(1926), 114 Ohio St. 361, 370, 151 N.E. 471: “[W]hen the Valentine Law was enacted in Ohio the Ohio Legislature adopted the judicial construction already placed upon the federal act by the federal courts * * *.” According to Johnson, this language should be read to mean that the
only
federal judicial construction the legislature intended to adopt was that in effect at the time it passed Ohio’s version of the Valentine Act on April 19, 1898. To accept the contrary view, Johnson argues, in other words that
of an ongoing parallel construction, would give the federal courts the power to amend Ohio statutes. In short, Johnson advocates the view that “[i]f a ‘direct-purchase’ requirement is to be found in the Valentine Act, it must either appear in the language of the statute, or, under
List,
in the federal construction of the federal statute when the General Assembly enacted or amended the Valentine Act.”
{¶ 12} We disagree with Johnson in several respects. First, it is an exaggeration to suggest that a policy of parallel construction somehow grants the federal courts the power to make Ohio law. Obviously, the Ohio legislature can at any time pass legislation that effectively repeals
Illinois Brick’s
direct-purchaser requirement, as 23 states have already done, and the Ohio Supreme Court can decide at any time that the requirement is not what the legislature intended in the first place. We are convinced, however, that the court in
C.K
established the principle that Ohio’s Valentine Act should be interpreted by Ohio lower courts in a manner consistent with federal interpretation of the Sherman Act. Furthermore, we are not persuaded to the contrary by the language in
List
quoted by Johnson.
List
was decided in 1926,
C.K
in 1980. In
C.K,
the court relied upon the
Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey v. United States
(1911), 221 U.S. 1, 31 S.Ct. 502, 55 L.Ed. 619 case that was decided by the United States Supreme Court in 1911, thus refuting the notion that the court’s language in
List
limited the applicability of federal judicial construction to that existing at the time the Valentine Act was passed in 1896. Furthermore, as noted previously, this court in
Acme Wrecking
applied to the Valentine Act the antitrust-injury limitation that was articulated by the United States Supreme Court in
Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co.
(1990), 495 U.S. 328, 110 S.Ct. 1884, 109 L.Ed.2d 333—-a federal case that followed passage of the Valentine Act by almost a century.
{¶ 13} Guided by the principle of stare decisis, we believe that this court has already adopted and applied an ongoing parallel federal-state construction of the Valentine Act. The rules of the game were established, we believe, in
C.K.
To hold otherwise now would not be consistent with our own precedent in
Acme Wrecking.
Furthermore, eschewing the direct-purchaser requirement would place this court outside what is clearly the weight of authority among state courts that have considered the same issue.
In our view, as evidenced by the legislative action taken by 23 of the 27 jurisdictions that have elected to allow indirect-purchaser actions, the decision is one involving public policy and thus should be made by the legislative rather than the judicial branch.
{¶ 14} Finally, we note that we find nothing in the language of the Ohio statute that would dictate a different result. Ohio’s version of the Valentine Act provides that “the person injured in the person’s business or property by another person by reason of anything forbidden or declared to be unlawful [under the Act], may sue therefor * * *.” R.C. 1331.08. Although at first blush this language may seem broad enough to infer an intent by the legislature to part company with
Illinois Brick
and allow for suits by indirect purchasers, it is essentially the same language that appears in the Clayton Act, and has therefore been rejected as a basis for diverging from the direct-purchaser requirement in jurisdictions such as Ohio that follow the federal paradigm. See
Major,
supra, 60 P.3d at 513.
{¶ 15} Johnson argues, alternatively, that even if the direct-purchaser requirement is held to be applicable under Ohio law, the licensing agreement that she entered into with Microsoft was sufficiently direct to satisfy the requirement. Johnson argues that the agreement was directly between Microsoft, the licensor, and herself, as licensee, and had nothing to do with the retailer, Gateway, as middleman. She advocates that we view the license agreement as, in essence, Microsoft’s product that she “purchased” by using her computer to manifest her agreement to the terms of the license.
{¶ 16} As Microsoft correctly argues, the United States Supreme Court has rejected an industry-specific approach to
Illinois Brick,
in other words, different rules for different industries.
Kansas v. UtiliCorp United Inc.
(1990), 497 U.S. 199, 110 S.Ct. 2807, 111 L.Ed.2d 169. According to Microsoft, the position advocated by Johnson would constitute a “software exception” unique to the computer industry and violate UtiliCorp’s rejection of exceptions for a particular market. We find this logic persuasive, as we do the decisions of other courts that have refused to equate a direct licensee in an indirect purchase with a direct purchaser. See, e.g.,
Pomerantz,
supra, 50 P.3d at 934-935;
Davidson v. Microsoft Corp.,
supra, 143 Md.App. at 53, 792 A.2d 336;
Minuteman, LLC,
supra, 147 N.H. at 640-641, 795 A.2d 833;
Major,
supra, 60 P.3d at 515;
Siena,
supra, 796 A.2d at 465;
Sherwood v. Microsoft Corp.
(July 31, 2003), No. M200001850-COA-R9-CV, 2003 WL 21780975 at * 5, 2003 Tenn.App. LEXIS 539 at 16 (use of the end-user license agreement as an exception to the indirect-purchaser preclusion “uniformly rejected”); and
In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litigation
(D.Md.2001), 127 F.Supp.2d 702, 709. As these courts have, correctly in our view, reasoned, “[w]hether the consumer purchases the software or [the EULA] the immediate economic transaction constituting the purchase occurs between the
consumer and the OEM or the retailer seller.”
Pomerantz,
supra, 50 P.3d at 934-935. Because the OEM or retail seller deals with the indirect purchaser, it strikes us that the court’s stated aversion to the complicating nature of pass-on theories in
Illinois Brick
remains equally pertinent here.
{¶ 17} Because we hold that the direct-purchaser requirement deprived Johnson of standing
to pursue a claim under the Valentine Act, we need not reach the other issues raised by the parties concerning the allegation of sufficient intrastate activity and the necessity of alleging “a combination, contract, or agreement.” Even if we were to agree with Johnson on both these issues, the fact remains that she lacked standing to assert a damage claim under the Act
because she did not purchase her PC with its preloaded software from Microsoft.
Restitution
{¶ 18} Johnson argues that even if she lacked standing under the Valentine Act, her restitution claim, on behalf of the putative class, still stated a viable claim for relief. In this regard, she argues that she alleged all the necessary elements to support claims of equitable restitution and unjust enrichment—to wit, that she and members of the putative class had conferred a benefit upon Microsoft and that it would be unjust or unfair to allow Microsoft to retain the benefit given its alleged monopolistic and anticompetitive activities.
{¶ 19} A restitution claim is designed to force the defendant to disgorge benefits that it has wrongfully or unjustly obtained. Dobbs, Remedies (1973), Section 4.1, at 224. Microsoft responds correctly, in our view, that the only direct benefit Johnson or members of the putative class conferred was the money that they paid to the retailers who sold them their individual computers or software. A promissory click to the Microsoft licensing agreement, following a purchase of the computer, was an indirect or incidental benefit to Microsoft, and as such it was insufficient under Ohio law to support a claim of restitution. Cf.
Norton v.
Gallon
(1989), 60 Ohio App.3d 109, 110, 573 N.E.2d 1208. Johnson, it should be noted, wanted more than simply to take back her promise to abide by the terms of the licensing agreement. Rather, in her view, by clicking her agreement on the computer, she was “purchasing” the licensing agreement, and her complaint asked for restitutionary damages equal to an amount that she and other members of the class claimed they had been overcharged for the software. We agree with Microsoft that this was essentially the putative class’s antitrust claim in a different guise, and that the same difficulties of pass-on theories and the like that troubled the court in
Illinois Brick
would confound calculation of any proper apportionment of damages between consumers such as Johnson and the retailers from whom they bought their computers.
Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act
{¶ 20} Johnson argues, finally, with respect to her remaining claim on behalf of the class under the Ohio Consumer Sales Practice Act, that the trial court applied an overly strict pleading requirement. She argues that the court required her to plead with a higher degree of specificity than that called for under the general rule that such claims be pleaded with only “reasonable specificity.” See
Amato v. Gen. Motors Corp.
(1982), 11 Ohio App.3d 124, 130, 11 OBR 203, 463 N.E.2d 625. We disagree.
{¶ 21} As Microsoft points out, the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act has specific rules permitting a class action. Under R.C. 1345.09(B), a class action is permitted under the Act if the plaintiff alleges that the substantive provisions of the Act have been violated, and (1) a specific rule or regulation has been promulgated under R.C. 1345.05 that specifically characterizes the challenged practice as unfair or deceptive, or (2) an Ohio state court has found the specific practice either unconscionable or deceptive in a decision open to public inspection. As Microsoft points out, Johnson pleaded neither of these elements despite the fact that she brought her claim as part of a class action.
{¶ 22} Furthermore, we find persuasive Microsoft’s argument that it is questionable whether the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act can even be said to apply to monopolistic and anticompetitive behavior, which is more correctly described as a manipulation of market forces than as a sales practice. The Consumer Sales Practices Act is targeted toward “suppliers” who are
“engaged in the business of effecting or soliciting consumer transactions
* * (Emphasis supplied.) R.C. 1345.01(C). Under R.C. 1345.02, unfair or deceptive sales practices are those that are likely to induce in the consumer a false state of mind concerning the product itself. R.C. 1345.03 sets forth certain circumstances to be used in determining whether a sales act or practice is unconscionable, and these indicate that unconscionability is directed toward some inherent unfairness in the
act of sale, such as overcharging, price gouging, unreasonable refusal to refund, and selling to those unable to pay. None of these stated practices provides support for a claim based upon alleged antitrust violations that affect competitive forces in the marketplace, which we believe that the legislature intended to exclusively address under the Valentine Act.
{¶ 23} A similar issue arose in
Sherwood,
supra, a case in which the Tennessee appeals court held that the state antitrust statute
did
provide for indirect-purchaser actions based upon certain unique language in the Tennessee statute. The
Sherwood
plaintiffs had also sought recovery under the Tennessee Consumer Protection Act, Tenn.Code Ann. 47-18-101-1808, upon the basis that the same arrangement in restraint of trade also constituted a violation of the TCPA. The
Shenvood
court rejected, however, the proposition that the same anticompetitive conduct actionable under the antitrust statute was actionable under the consumer protection statute, despite the statutory admonition that the TCPA was to be liberally construed to “protect consumers and legitimate business enterprises from those who engage in unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce * * Tenn.Code Ann. 47-18-102(2). Tracing the history of the Tennessee statute back to the development of the Uniform Trade Practices Act and Consumer Protection Law developed in the 1960s, the court noted that, as these and other uniform acts
evolved, state legislatures were faced with the choice of adopting either a version that mirrored the Federal Trade Commission Act, Section 45(a)(1), Title 15, U.S.Code, prohibiting both unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices (referred to as the “little FTC Act” version), or another version that elected only to prohibit unfair and deceptive acts and practices without including language targeting unfair methods of competition.
Sherwood,
supra, at * 32, 2003 Tenn. App. LEXIS 539 at 108. The Tennessee court reasoned that because the history of consumer-protection legislation clearly showed that at the time the Tennessee legislature adopted its version of the Consumer Protection Act, its legislators had the benefit of the uniform laws and the federal law, the only conclusion to be drawn was that the Tennessee General Assembly “knowingly chose not to include antitrust or anticompetitive conduct as actionable under the TCPA.” Id. at * 33, 2003 TenmApp. LEXIS 539 at 110.
{¶ 24} We find the same logic persuasive here. Indeed, it would have been a small matter for the General Assembly to include language in the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act prohibiting unfair methods of competition if it had wished to do so. By comparing and contrasting the two statutes, we find it to be quite
clear that the Valentine Act was meant to be the legal remedy in Ohio for the type of conduct for which Johnson has sought recourse. Unfortunately for her and the putative members of her class, the direct-purchaser requirement of
Illinois Brick
forecloses the type of action she wishes to bring until the legislature or the Ohio Supreme Court repeals or rejects it.
{¶ 25} In sum, we hold that Johnson’s amended complaint failed to state claims under Ohio common law, the Valentine Act, or the Ohio Consumer Sales Practice Act. Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it granted Microsoft’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Civ.R. 12(B)(6). The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Doan, P.J., concurs.
Pajnter, J., dissents.