MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND ORDER
LEVI, District Judge.
Plaintiff Harry Toscano brings this action against the PGA Tour, Inc. (“the
Tour”), the individual officers and directors of the Tour, and various sponsors of the Tour’s golf tournaments, alleging that they conspired to restrain trade in senior professional golf in violation of Section One of the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. The sponsor defendants move for summary judgment.
I.
The Senior PGA Tour co-sponsors professional golf tournaments for players over the age of 50. (March 23, 1998 Mem. of Op. & Order at 1.) Toscano challenges the Tour’s regulations governing (1) player eligibility, and (2) player participation in non-PGA events.
The Tour’s Rules and Regulations provide for a 78-player field for each tournament. A player is exempt from having to compete in the qualifying rounds of the tournament if he has secured 75 or more victories in Senior PGA or PGA Tour events or is within any of the following categories: (1) the top 31 available players from the previous year’s Tour Money List; (2) the top 31 available players from the All-Time Career Money List (which includes purses won both in Senior PGA Tour tournaments and in PGA tournaments); (3) the top eight players from the Tour’s annual National Qualifying Tournament (in order of finishing); (4) players who have won a Tour tournament within the past 12 months; (5) the top four scorers in the qualifying round of play held before the tournament at issue; (6) four players designated by the tournament’s local sponsor; and (7) on a space available basis, any otherwise non-exempt player who has won a Senior PGA Tour or PGA Tour tournament. (Moorhead Decl. ¶ 9; Pl.’s App. 1 at 5-9.)
The Rules and Regulations also restrict the ability of Tour members to participate in non-Tour events. Under the “Conflicting Events” Rule, a player who qualifies to play in a Tour event generally may not enter a non-Tour tournament scheduled on the same date unless he first obtains a written release from the Tour Commissioner.
(Pl.’s App. 1 at 25.) The Commissioner has discretionary authority to grant a Tour member two releases annually, assuming he participates in 15 Tour events, and ah additional release for every five Tour events in which he participates above 15.
(Id.
at 26.) The Commissioner may deny a Tour member’s request for a waiver if he determines that it “would cause [the] Tour to be in violation of a contractual commitment to a tournament or would otherwise significantly or unreasonably harm [the] Tour and such tournament.”
(Id.)
Moreover, under the “Television Release” or “Media Rights” Rule, Tour members must also seek the Commissioner’s approval before participating in a televised tournament that is not cosponsored or approved by the Tour, irrespective of whether the tournament conflicts with a Tour event.
(Id.
at 27-28.)
The Rules and Regulations governing the Senior PGA Tour are controlled by the Tour’s Division Board (the “Board”). (PL’s App. 1 at 48.) The Board is comprised of four Player Directors, the immediate past President of the PGA, and four Independent Directors, defined as “four public figures with a demonstrated interest in the game of golf.”
(Id.
at 45.) Player Directors are elected by voting members of the Tour, and hold office for a period of two years.
(Id.)
Any amendment to the Rules and Regulations must be approved by a majority of the Board, including three Player Directors, unless a conflict of interest exists.
Amendments adopted by the
Board may be reversed by a two-thirds vote of all voting members of the Tour.
Although no representative of the sponsor defendants is or has been a member of the Board, (Moorhouse Decl. ¶ 14), Tosca-no contends that the sponsor defendants conspired with the Tour to perpetuate and enforce the Rules and Regulations he challenges. Tour sponsors fall into two rough categories: “local sponsors” and “title sponsors.” Local sponsors are nonprofit or charitable organizations that contract directly with the Tour.
(Id.
¶ B.) Local sponsors serve as the principal organizers of Tour events, and are responsible for reserving a golf course that meets Tour specifications, hiring and paying staff for the tournament, amassing the tournament prize money, advertising and promoting the event, and arranging for the sale of concessions.
(Id.
¶4.) In order to cover the cost of organizing and operating the tournament, local sponsors in turn enter into agreements with title sponsors — businesses who pay for the right to advertise in connection with the tournament. (Moorhouse Decl. ¶ 5.) The local sponsor typically agrees to organize and conduct the tournament in accordance with PGA Rules and Regulations, incorporate the title sponsor’s name into the Tournament title, display signage with the title sponsor’s name at the tournament site, provide hospitality benefits at the tournament, and secure national television and print media advertising.
(E.g.,
Defs.’ App. 7, 9, 10.) In return, the title sponsor generally makes payments under a fixed schedule, or assumes financial responsibility for a significant portion of the Tournament purse and television and advertising costs.
(Id.
7, 8, 9,10,11.)
The organization of the Ralphs Senior Classic tournament illustrates the relationships among local sponsors, title sponsors, and the Tour. The local sponsor, defendant Centinela Hospital Medical Center (“Cen-tinela”), entered into a contract directly with the PGA to organize and run a golf tournament in Los Angeles, California. The agreement provides that “[t]he general division of duties will be that [Centinela] will provide the course, the clubhouse, and all other facilities of every kind necessary or appropriate for professional golf competition, and PGA Tour, with the assistance of [Centinela], will conduct the competition.” (Def.’s App. 3 at CH-00014.) Cen-tinela in turn entered into a title sponsorship with Ralphs. In exchange for a series of payments to Centinela, Ralphs secured advertising and media rights in connection with the tournament, including the right to have its name included in the tournament’s title (hence, “The Ralphs Senior Classic”) and to use the tournament logo in its advertisements. (Def.’s App. 15 at RG-00054, 00060).
II.
Section One of the Sherman Act prohibits “[e]very contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. This phrase “has been interpreted to require concerted action of more than a single entity.”
The Jeanery, Inc. v. James Jeans, Inc.,
849 F.2d 1148, 1152 (9th Cir.1988).
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MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND ORDER
LEVI, District Judge.
Plaintiff Harry Toscano brings this action against the PGA Tour, Inc. (“the
Tour”), the individual officers and directors of the Tour, and various sponsors of the Tour’s golf tournaments, alleging that they conspired to restrain trade in senior professional golf in violation of Section One of the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. The sponsor defendants move for summary judgment.
I.
The Senior PGA Tour co-sponsors professional golf tournaments for players over the age of 50. (March 23, 1998 Mem. of Op. & Order at 1.) Toscano challenges the Tour’s regulations governing (1) player eligibility, and (2) player participation in non-PGA events.
The Tour’s Rules and Regulations provide for a 78-player field for each tournament. A player is exempt from having to compete in the qualifying rounds of the tournament if he has secured 75 or more victories in Senior PGA or PGA Tour events or is within any of the following categories: (1) the top 31 available players from the previous year’s Tour Money List; (2) the top 31 available players from the All-Time Career Money List (which includes purses won both in Senior PGA Tour tournaments and in PGA tournaments); (3) the top eight players from the Tour’s annual National Qualifying Tournament (in order of finishing); (4) players who have won a Tour tournament within the past 12 months; (5) the top four scorers in the qualifying round of play held before the tournament at issue; (6) four players designated by the tournament’s local sponsor; and (7) on a space available basis, any otherwise non-exempt player who has won a Senior PGA Tour or PGA Tour tournament. (Moorhead Decl. ¶ 9; Pl.’s App. 1 at 5-9.)
The Rules and Regulations also restrict the ability of Tour members to participate in non-Tour events. Under the “Conflicting Events” Rule, a player who qualifies to play in a Tour event generally may not enter a non-Tour tournament scheduled on the same date unless he first obtains a written release from the Tour Commissioner.
(Pl.’s App. 1 at 25.) The Commissioner has discretionary authority to grant a Tour member two releases annually, assuming he participates in 15 Tour events, and ah additional release for every five Tour events in which he participates above 15.
(Id.
at 26.) The Commissioner may deny a Tour member’s request for a waiver if he determines that it “would cause [the] Tour to be in violation of a contractual commitment to a tournament or would otherwise significantly or unreasonably harm [the] Tour and such tournament.”
(Id.)
Moreover, under the “Television Release” or “Media Rights” Rule, Tour members must also seek the Commissioner’s approval before participating in a televised tournament that is not cosponsored or approved by the Tour, irrespective of whether the tournament conflicts with a Tour event.
(Id.
at 27-28.)
The Rules and Regulations governing the Senior PGA Tour are controlled by the Tour’s Division Board (the “Board”). (PL’s App. 1 at 48.) The Board is comprised of four Player Directors, the immediate past President of the PGA, and four Independent Directors, defined as “four public figures with a demonstrated interest in the game of golf.”
(Id.
at 45.) Player Directors are elected by voting members of the Tour, and hold office for a period of two years.
(Id.)
Any amendment to the Rules and Regulations must be approved by a majority of the Board, including three Player Directors, unless a conflict of interest exists.
Amendments adopted by the
Board may be reversed by a two-thirds vote of all voting members of the Tour.
Although no representative of the sponsor defendants is or has been a member of the Board, (Moorhouse Decl. ¶ 14), Tosca-no contends that the sponsor defendants conspired with the Tour to perpetuate and enforce the Rules and Regulations he challenges. Tour sponsors fall into two rough categories: “local sponsors” and “title sponsors.” Local sponsors are nonprofit or charitable organizations that contract directly with the Tour.
(Id.
¶ B.) Local sponsors serve as the principal organizers of Tour events, and are responsible for reserving a golf course that meets Tour specifications, hiring and paying staff for the tournament, amassing the tournament prize money, advertising and promoting the event, and arranging for the sale of concessions.
(Id.
¶4.) In order to cover the cost of organizing and operating the tournament, local sponsors in turn enter into agreements with title sponsors — businesses who pay for the right to advertise in connection with the tournament. (Moorhouse Decl. ¶ 5.) The local sponsor typically agrees to organize and conduct the tournament in accordance with PGA Rules and Regulations, incorporate the title sponsor’s name into the Tournament title, display signage with the title sponsor’s name at the tournament site, provide hospitality benefits at the tournament, and secure national television and print media advertising.
(E.g.,
Defs.’ App. 7, 9, 10.) In return, the title sponsor generally makes payments under a fixed schedule, or assumes financial responsibility for a significant portion of the Tournament purse and television and advertising costs.
(Id.
7, 8, 9,10,11.)
The organization of the Ralphs Senior Classic tournament illustrates the relationships among local sponsors, title sponsors, and the Tour. The local sponsor, defendant Centinela Hospital Medical Center (“Cen-tinela”), entered into a contract directly with the PGA to organize and run a golf tournament in Los Angeles, California. The agreement provides that “[t]he general division of duties will be that [Centinela] will provide the course, the clubhouse, and all other facilities of every kind necessary or appropriate for professional golf competition, and PGA Tour, with the assistance of [Centinela], will conduct the competition.” (Def.’s App. 3 at CH-00014.) Cen-tinela in turn entered into a title sponsorship with Ralphs. In exchange for a series of payments to Centinela, Ralphs secured advertising and media rights in connection with the tournament, including the right to have its name included in the tournament’s title (hence, “The Ralphs Senior Classic”) and to use the tournament logo in its advertisements. (Def.’s App. 15 at RG-00054, 00060).
II.
Section One of the Sherman Act prohibits “[e]very contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce.” 15 U.S.C. § 1. This phrase “has been interpreted to require concerted action of more than a single entity.”
The Jeanery, Inc. v. James Jeans, Inc.,
849 F.2d 1148, 1152 (9th Cir.1988).
The Sponsor defendants argue that there is no triable issue of fact as to whether they and the Tour engaged in concerted anticompetitive action in violation of § l.
Because the local sponsor defendants and title sponsor defendants have somewhat different relationships with the Tom, they are discussed separately below.
A. Local Sponsors
Defendants maintain that under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Monsanto v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp.,
465 U.S. 752, 104 S.Ct. 1464, 79 L.Ed.2d 775 (1984), the local sponsors’ dealings with the Tour do not rise to the level of concerted action within the meaning of § 1. The court agrees.
In
Monsanto,
the Court affirmed the right of a manufacturer to announce the terms under which it will deal with distributors and then refuse to deal with those unwilling to accept its terms. The Court explained that a conspiracy between a manufacturer and its distributors could not be inferred from mere compliance by the distributors with the manufacturer’s sales restrictions, since manufacturers often have independent reasons for imposing such restrictions.
See id.
at 762-63, 104 S.Ct. at 1470. For example, a manufacturer may “want to ensure that its distributors earn sufficient profit to pay for programs such as hiring and training additional salesmen or demonstrating the technical features of the product, and will want to see that ‘free riders’ do not interfere.”
Id.
at 762-63, 104 S.Ct. at 1470. Accordingly, before a plaintiff can establish concerted action between a manufacturer and its distributors under § 1, “[t]here must be evidence that tends to exclude the possibility that the manufacturer and nonterminated distributors were acting independently.”
Id.
at 764, 104 S.Ct. at 1471. In particular, the plaintiff must advance evidence “that reasonably tends to prove that the manufacturer and others had a
conscious commitment to a common scheme
designed to achieve an unlawful objective.”
Id.
at 764, 104 S.Ct. at 1471 (citation and internal. quotations omitted) (emphasis added).
Defendants argue that
Monsanto
applies here because the relationship between the Tour and the local sponsors is analogous to that between a manufacturer and its distributors. According to defendants, the Tour unilaterally establishes its Rules and Regulations, and local sponsors merely acquiesce in those rules, much the same way a distributor acquiesces in terms announced by a manufacturer. Moreover, defendants point out that the interests of the Tour and the local sponsors do not necessarily coincide; even assuming that Toscano is correct in asserting that the Rules and Regulations are designed to qualify players with established PGA records and lock those players into the Tour, the Tour may have adopted this strategy to maximize the popularity of its tournaments, irrespective of the local sponsor’s views about how the tournaments should be structured.
In response, Toscano contends that the following circumstantial evidence excludes the possibility of independent action by the Tour and the local sponsors: (1) contractual agreements between those parties; and (2) evidence that the local sponsors commented on the Tour’s rules.
1. Local Sponsorship Contracts
Toscano points out that the local sponsorship contracts make express reference to the provisions challenged by Toscano. For example, the sponsorship agreement between the Tour and defendant Centinela Hospital states:
Sponsor and PGA Tour agree ... that PGA Tour will provide services for such competition in accordance with the provisions herein and with the Senior PGA Tour Tournament Regulations as they may from time to time apply, and which are incorporated herein by reference.
PGA Tour will fill the field of contestants in accordance with the SENIOR PGA TOUR Tournament Regulations.
Players eligible to apply to enter the Tournament shall be those prescribed in the Senior PGA Tour Tournament Regulations.
(Def.’s App. 3, at CH-00016, CH-00017, CH-00018.) This language does not, however, exclude the possibility of independent action or support a finding that the local sponsors and the Tour had a “conscious commitment” to a scheme to establish and perpetuate the Rules and Regulations. The agreements merely obligate the Tour to run its tournaments in accordance with its own rules; they in no way suggest that the local sponsors have any influence or exert any control over the rules themselves or did anything other than to accede to the Tour’s natural desire to run its tournaments according to its rules.
Toscano counters that the mere existence of contracts between the Tour and its local sponsors suffices to satisfy the concerted action requirement of § 1. But whether a contract alone gives rise to an inference of concerted action depends upon the nature of the anticompetitive conduct alleged by plaintiff.
Cf.
VII Philip E. Ar-eeda,
Antitrust Law
¶ 1400 at 5 (1986) (observing that “if the reasons for prohibiting or controlling certain conduct are very strong, it makes sense to err on the side of overinclusiveness in determining the presence of an agreement”). Tosca-no’s § 1 claim is based upon a vertical boycott theory. He alleges that the Tour conspired with certain of its officers, the Player Directors, and the sponsors to boycott Toscano and similarly situated players from participating in the market for senior professional golf. None of these categories of defendants competes with each other, and each plays a different role in the conspiracy theory advanced by Toscano.
Because “precedent limits the per se rule in the boycott context to cases involving horizontal agreements among direct competitors,”
NYNEX Corp. v. Discon, Inc.,
525 U.S. 128, 119 S.Ct. 493, 498, 142 L.Ed.2d 510 (1998), Toscano’s claim must be analyzed under the Rule of Reason.
The Rule of Reason governs a wide array of conduct that requires cooperation and may be as likely to promote competition as it is to suppress it.
See e.g., Polk Bros., Inc. v. Forest City Enters., Inc.,
776 F.2d 185, 188 (7th Cir.1985) (Easterbrook, J.) (observing that “(j]oint ventures, mergers, systems of distribution — all these and more require extensive cooperation, and all are assessed under a Rule of Reason”). Because contracts are often used to regulate relationships among cooperating entities, a rule equating the
mere existence of a contract with concerted action in Rule of Reason cases would create a significant risk of deterring pro-competitive behavior.
Cf. Monsanto,
465 U.S. at 763, 104 S.Ct. at 1470 (warning that inferring concerted action from conduct consistent with independent action “could deter or penalize perfectly legitimate conduct”). Accordingly, the courts have held that where the conduct challenged by the plaintiff is subject to Rule of Reason analysis, the existence of a contract between a party who announces his terms and a party who acquiesces in them does not, without more, give rise to an inference of concerted action under § 1.
See Matrix Essentials v. Emporium, Drug Mart, Inc.,
988 F.2d 587, 594 (5th Cir.1993) (rejecting the defendant’s § 1 defense despite the existence of a contract between the plaintiff manufacturer and its distributors in which the plaintiff unilaterally established the non-price restraint challenged by the defendant);
American Airlines v. Christensen,
967 F.2d 410, 413 (10th Cir.1992) (concluding that contracts between the defendant airline and members of its travel awards program raised no triable issue of fact as to concerted action where “[n]o evidence in the record suggested] that [the airline] did not independently set the terms under which it would offer its travel awards”);
see also Beutler Sheetmetal Works v. McMorgan & Co.,
616 F.Supp. 453, 454-56 (N.D.Cal.1985) (finding no triable issue of fact as to whether the defendant lender and its borrowers engaged in concerted action where the borrowers acquiesced in terms announced by the lender and incorporated in the latter’s commitment letters).
If the contract between the Tour and the local sponsors sufficed to make the latter co-conspirators under § 1, any party, however small, would risk antitrust liability based upon the Tour’s conduct simply by contracting ‘with the Tour to do business at a typical Tour event run according to Tour rules. Antitrust liability would potentially extend to sidewalk vendors, limousine services, local businesses seeking advertising — any business, however far removed from the market for professional golf, that happened to enter into such an agreement with the Tour. Because this result would be inconsistent-with the purpose of the Sherman Act,
Toscano
must, under
Monsanto,
come forward with additional evidence excluding the possibility of independent action and suggesting that the Tour and the local sponsors “had a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective.”
Monsanto,
465 U.S. at 764, 104 S.Ct. at 1471 (citation and internal quotations omitted).
2. Notice and Comment Procedure
Toscano also points out that before the Tour’s Board takes a final vote on amendments to the Rules and Regulations, it oversees a notice-and-comment procedure in which both local and title sponsors may participate. According to Toscano, the sponsors use this process to influence and shape the rules.
There is little support in the record for this contention. It is undisputed that no representative of the sponsor defendants has ever sat on the Board. The testimony of PGA Tour Commissioner Timothy Fin-chem, on which Toscano heavily relies, suggests that the decision to adopt or amend the Rules and Regulations rests ultimately with the Board. Finchem testified that there is “a period of time where the sponsors — the tournaments can have impact and access to various members of the board to write memos stating their position or orally make their position known to players who are on the Player Advisory Council or player directors or independent directors or whatever.” (Fin-chem Depo. at 78:1-8.) But he also made clear that “[sjometimes [the sponsor’s] position is one that the board eventually agreed with and sometimes it doesn’t.”
{Id.
at 79:12-13.)
Evidence that the local sponsors sporadically participated in the Tour’s notice and comment procedures does not reasonably exclude the possibility of independent action. In the analogous context of manufacturer-distributor relationships, the courts have uniformly held that concerted action between manufacturers and distributors may not be inferred from mere evidence that the manufacturer considered complaints from distributors before enforcing its sales rules against a wayward distributor.
See Monsanto,
465 U.S. at 763, 104 S.Ct. at 1470 (explaining that distributor complaints “arise in the normal course of business and do not indicate illegal concerted action”) (citation and internal quotations omitted);
O.S.C. Corp. v. Apple Computer, Inc.,
792 F.2d 1464, 1468 (9th Cir.1986) (holding that “[dealer] complaints followed by termination are not enough to provide sufficient proof of an antitrust conspiracy”);
The Jeanery,
849 F.2d at 1157 (“Complaints by competitors, standing alone, are not sufficient to show a conspiracy.”);
Isaksen v. Vermont Castings, Inc.,
825 F.2d 1158, 1162 (7th Cir.1987) (Posner, J.) (“Complaints to a supplier, made by competitors of a dealer who is cutting prices below suggested levels are not, standing alone, evidence of agreement”). Moreover, there is no evidence that any of the sponsor defendants commented on the particular rules challenged by Toscano.
The mere possibility that a local sponsor could advocate for or against a rule is not sufficient by itself to support a finding that
the Tour and the local sponsors reached common objectives concerning eligibility requirements.
3. The Record as a Whole
To avoid summary judgment, Toscano must present evidence showing “that the hypothesis of collusive action [i]s more plausible than that of individual action.”
In re Brand Name Prescription Drugs Antitrust Litig.,
186 F.3d 781, 785 (7th Cir.1999) (Posner, C.J.);
see also Matsu-shita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
475 U.S. 574, 588, 106 S.Ct. 1348, 1356-57, 89 L.Ed.2d 538 (1986) (explaining that a plaintiff asserting a § 1 claim “must show that the inference of conspiracy is reasonable in light of the competing inferences of independent action or collusive action that could not have harmed [him]”). As noted above, however, the record lacks concrete evidence that the local sponsors held specific views about the Rules and Regulations targeted by Toscano, that those views, if any, were communicated to the Tour, and that the Tour relied on these putative views in adopting or amending its rales.
It is equally if not more reasonable to infer from the record that the Tour and local sponsors acted independently with respect to the challenged rules.
According to Toscano, the Tour’s eligibility and participation requirements are intended to capture golfers who have met with previous success on the Tour “to the exclusion of equally or better qualified individuals.” However, the local sponsors might very well be indifferent as to whether the Tour focuses on players with a history of winning or players with the best ability, so long as the Tour’s events draw public attention sufficient to further the local sponsors’ fundraising objectives. Nor are the local sponsors’ interests clearly aligned with the Tour’s interest in the Conflicting Event and Television Release rules. Toscano maintains that these rules are designed to prevent competing leagues from springing up. But the local sponsors could well benefit from a market with competing leagues in which they might be able to negotiate more favorable terms with the Tour and have greater choice.
Because “the evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the [entity] at the top of the vertical chain designed the [challenged] restrictions for its own purposes, an inference of conspiracy is inappropri
ate.”
Illinois Corp. Travel, Inc. v. American Airlines, Inc.,
806 F.2d 722, 726 (7th Cir.1986) (Easterbrook, J.). Accordingly, the local sponsors are entitled to summary judgment.
B. Title Sponsors
Toscano’s § 1 claim against the title sponsor defendants is even weaker than his claim against the local sponsors. Unlike the local sponsors, the title sponsors do not contract directly with the Tour.
And, as discussed above, Toscano has submitted no evidence showing that any of the sponsor defendants commented specifically on the rules he challenges.
Toscano correctly points out that a GM representative testified in his deposition that “the possibility that someone from General Motors commented on the regulations at one time in the nine-year history is likely.” (Comb Depo. at 47:20-24.) In addition, Commissioner Finchem stated in his deposition that GM, like any sponsor, would be able to comment on the Rules and Regulations as part of the notice and comment period preceding a vote by the Tour’s Board:
Question: If, in fact, you portend [sic] to make changes to the regulations, would Cadillac have the ability to comment upon same?
Answer: Yes, we would treat Cadillac in that context in the same way we would treat any of the title sponsors or the tournament organizations. We would ask for their comments.
(Finchem Depo. at 11-17.) As explained above, however, evidence that a sponsor commented on the Rules and Regulations is consistent with independent decision making by the Board, and does not alone give rise to a reasonable inference of concerted action.
Moreover, there is no evidence that GM or any other title sponsor directed any comments to the particular rules that Toscano attacks as anti-competitive.
Because Toscano has faked to present evidence “show[ing] that the inference of conspiracy is reasonable in light of the competing inference[ ] of independent action,”
Matsushita,
475 U.S. at 588, 106 S.Ct. at 1356, the title sponsor defendants are entitled to summary judgment.
The sponsor defendants’ motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.