Rick-Mik Enterprises v. Equilon

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 11, 2008
Docket06-55937
StatusPublished

This text of Rick-Mik Enterprises v. Equilon (Rick-Mik Enterprises v. Equilon) 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
Rick-Mik Enterprises v. Equilon, (9th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

RICK-MIK ENTERPRISES INC.; MIKE  M. MADANI; ALFRED BUCZKOWSKI, on behalf of themselves and those No. 06-55937 similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants,  D.C. No. CV-05-08212-R v. OPINION EQUILON ENTERPRISES, LLC, doing business as Shell Oil Products US, Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California Manuel L. Real, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted February 12, 2008—Pasadena, California

Filed July 11, 2008

Before: Betty B. Fletcher and N. Randy Smith, Circuit Judges, and Samuel P. King,* District Judge.

Opinion by Judge King

*The Honorable Samuel P. King, Senior United States District Judge for the District of Hawaii, Sitting by Designation.

8499 8502 RICK-MIK v. EQUILON ENTERPRISES

COUNSEL

Thomas P. Bleau (argued), Martin R. Fox, Gennady L. Lebedev, H. Michael Song, Bleau Fox & Fong, Los Angeles, California, for the plaintiffs-appellants.

Bradley S. Phillips (argued), Fred A. Rowley, Jr., Munger Tolles & Olson, Los Angeles, California, for the defendant- appellee.

OPINION

KING, District Judge:

Equilon Enterprises, LLC (“Equilon”) does business as Shell Oil Products. Equilon’s standard franchise agreement requires its franchisees, Shell and Texaco gasoline stations, to use Equilon to process credit-card transactions. In addition to payment for sales of petroleum products, Equilon allegedly gets (1) transaction fees associated with the processing, or (2) some kind of unspecified “kickback” from unidentified banks that process the transactions, or both. Rick-Mik Enterprises, Inc., Mike M. Madani, and Alfred Buczkowski (collectively “Rick-Mik”) are Equilon franchisees who — on behalf of themselves and other, similarly-situated Equilon franchisees — allege that Equilon violated antitrust laws by illegally tying two distinct products (the franchises and the credit-card pro- cessing services). Rick-Mik contends franchisees could pay RICK-MIK v. EQUILON ENTERPRISES 8503 lower transaction fees from others for credit-card processing. Rick-Mik also alleges that Equilon illegally agreed with banks to price-fix processing fees.

The district court dismissed the antitrust and related state- law counts from Rick-Mik’s complaint. We affirm because: (1) Rick-Mik’s complaint failed to allege market power in the relevant market; (2) in the alleged franchising context, credit- card processing services are not a product distinct from the franchise itself; (3) the price-fixing allegations were imper- missibly vague; and (4) Rick-Mik waived the opportunity to attempt to cure these deficiencies.

BACKGROUND

Rick-Mik appeals an order dismissing five of six counts of its complaint alleging antitrust violations against Equilon. The complaint alleged an unlawful tie between Equilon’s fran- chises (the “tying” product) and credit- and debit-card pro- cessing services (the “tied” product) which Equilon requires as part of the franchise agreement.

Shortly after Rick-Mik’s complaint was filed, in lieu of an answer, Equilon moved to dismiss counts one (violation of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, for unlawful tying); two (viola- tion of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, for unlawful price fix- ing); three (California state law violations for unlawful tying); four (California state law violations for unlawful price- fixing); and six (California state law violations for unfair competition). Count five, which Equilon did not move to dis- miss, claimed violations of California’s franchise investment law.

Because the appeal is from an order granting a motion to dismiss, we assume the factual allegations of the complaint are true. Knevelbaard Dairies v. Kraft Foods, Inc., 232 F.3d 979, 984 (9th Cir. 2000). The question is whether the allega- 8504 RICK-MIK v. EQUILON ENTERPRISES tions, together with the attachments to the complaint,1 set forth viable antitrust theories. The relevant parts of the com- plaint are set forth verbatim:

20. EQUILON refines and markets substantial volumes of gasoline and other petroleum products under both the Shell and Texaco brand names in all or parts of 31 states, selling petroleum products to approximately 9,000 Shell and Texaco-branded retail outlets.

21. Combined with its affiliate, Motiva Enter- prises LLC (hereafter “Motiva”), EQUILON and Motiva (collectively referred to as “Retail USA” by Shell Oil Company, the parent company of both EQUILON and Motiva) rank number one in the industry in branded gasoline stations. At 13 percent, EQUILON and Motiva also rank number one in total gallons of gasoline sold in the United States.

22. EQUILON’s annual gross revenue is approxi- mately $24 billion.

23. EQUILON is number one in market share in Oregon, Arizona, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas and Kentucky. EQUILON is number two in market share in Alaska, Hawaii, California, Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Indiana and Illinois.

24. EQUILON has four refineries, refining approximately 753,000 barrels of petroleum products per day and owns a 50 percent interest in Motiva’s 1 “In determining whether a plaintiff can prove facts in support of his or her claim that would entitle him or her to relief, we may consider facts contained in documents attached to the complaint.” Tyler v. Cuomo, 236 F.3d 1124, 1131 (9th Cir. 2000) (citation omitted). RICK-MIK v. EQUILON ENTERPRISES 8505 three refineries, refining approximately 865,000 bar- rels of petroleum products per day.

25. EQUILON owns an interest in approximately 10,000 miles of pipeline used to transport its petro- leum products throughout the United States.

26. With 75 percent of all Americans living within five miles of a Shell-branded gasoline station, EQUILON and Motiva serve, on average, more than six million customers per day and sell approximately 19 billion gallons of gasoline per year, most of which is purchased by customers’ credit and/or debit cards issued by thousands of banks, banking associa- tions and financial institutions throughout the States.

27. EQUILON requires each and everyone one [sic] of its Shell and Texaco-branded franchisees to execute a standardized “Retail Sales Agreement,” including Plaintiffs, before they can purchase petro- leum products from EQUILON for resale to consum- ers. A true and correct copy of a Plaintiff RICK-MIK ENTERPRISES, INC.’s Retail Sales Agreement effective September 1, 2004, is attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference as Exhibit “A”.

28. Plaintiff RICK-MIK ENTERPRISES, INC.’s Retail Sales Agreement attached hereto as Exhibit “A” is virtually identical to all of the other Retail Sales Agreements EQUILON requires each one of its franchisees to sign before they can purchase petroleum products from EQUILON for resale to consumers.

29. EQUILON’s Retail Sales Agreements requires [sic] Plaintiffs, and the Class that Plaintiffs repre- sent, to accept all credit and debit cards authorized exclusively by EQUILON and requires that all credit 8506 RICK-MIK v. EQUILON ENTERPRISES and debit card transactions at each one of its fran- chisees’ stations, including Plaintiffs’ stations, to be [sic] processed solely through EQUILON, which Plaintiffs must accept as a condition of EQUILON before they can purchase Shell and/or Texaco petro- leum products from EQUILON for resale to consum- ers.

30.

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Rick-Mik Enterprises v. Equilon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rick-mik-enterprises-v-equilon-ca9-2008.