Xcaliber International Limited v. Attorney General

612 F.3d 368, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14513, 2010 WL 2773431
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2010
Docket09-30492
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 612 F.3d 368 (Xcaliber International Limited v. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Xcaliber International Limited v. Attorney General, 612 F.3d 368, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14513, 2010 WL 2773431 (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellant Xcaliber International Limited LLC (“Xcaliber”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Attorney General of Louisiana (the “State”). Xcaliber manufactures and sells discount cigarettes. The case presents a challenge to an amendment to the state law implementing the tobacco settlement between the largest manufacturers of cigarettes and most of the states. Xcaliber claims that the amendment is preempted by federal antitrust law and violates the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses.

I

Since 2003, Xcaliber has manufactured tobacco products and distributed them primarily in Louisiana, Kansas, and Oklahoma. Louisiana is one of many states that, during the mid-1990s, sued the country’s largest tobacco manufacturers to recover health care costs related to smoking. In 1998 these states signed the Master Settlement Agreement (the “MSA”), which settled the litigation between them and four major tobacco manufacturers (“Original Participating Manufacturers” or “OPMs”).

The MSA released OPMs from all tobacco-related legal claims initiated by the states. In return, each OPM agreed to make annual payments into a collective fund with each OPM’s contribution determined primarily by multiplying an agreed sum that increased each year by each OPM’s respective cigarette market share. The total of all payments was then to be allocated among the states based on a fixed formula, with Louisiana receiving approximately 2.26 percent of the total as its “allocable share.” The MSA also placed various restrictions on each OPM. For example, it (1) banned political lobbying; (2) restricted trade association activities; (3) *372 prevented legal challenges to various state tobacco laws; and, (4) prohibited some forms of advertising.

Other tobacco manufacturers were later given the opportunity to join the MSA. Those who did are referred to as Subsequent Participating Manufacturers (“SPMs”). SPMs that joined the MSA within ninety days were given special treatment (la, “grandfathered in”). These “exempt” SPMs do not pay a per cigarette amount on current sales until those sales exceed the level of their 1998 sales or 125% of their 1997 sales. The combination of the OPMs and SPMs are collectively referred to as PMs (i.e., participating manufactures). Tobacco manufacturers, like Xcaliber, that are not PMs are referred to as Non-Participating Manufacturers (“NPMs”).

Standing alone, the MSA would put PMs at a cost disadvantage in comparison to NPMs since only the PMs are required to pay a per-cigarette amount under the terms of the MSA. As a result of the MSA, PMs must raise prices in order to stay profitable at a rate similar to the preMSA rate while satisfying their payments under the MSA. Thus, absent some mechanism to impose similar per-cigarette costs on NPMs, NPMs could sell at lower prices and potentially increase their market share.

To neutralize this effect, the MSA requires each state to enact legislation, which in Louisiana is codified at La.Rev. Stat. §§ 13:5061-5063. The statute requires every NPM selling cigarettes in Louisiana to either (1) become a PM under the MSA’s terms, or (2) deposit money annually into an escrow account. See § 13:5063. The amount to be deposited is calculated by multiplying the numbers of cigarettes sold in the state by a fixed charge listed in the amended statute that increases over time. See § 13:5063(C)(1). The amount is roughly the same as that paid by PMs, currently $0,025 per cigarette. The interest accrued on the es-crowed funds is paid out to the NPM, and the principal is either paid to Louisiana to satisfy a future judgment entered against such NPM, or returned to the NPM if twenty-five years pass without such a judgment. See § 13:5063(0(2).

Until 2003, the statute also contained the following provision:

(b) To the extent that a[NPM] establishes that the amount it was required to place into escrow in a particular year was greater than the state’s allocable share of the total payments that such manufacturer would have been required to make in that year under the [Agreement] ... had it been a[PM], the excess shall be released from escrow and revert back to such [NPM].

§ 13:5063(C)(2)(b) (emphasis added) (the “Original Escrow Provision”). The Original Escrow Provision created a loophole. An NPM could recover funds that it placed into escrow in a particular state to the extent that those funds exceeded the amount the state would receive from that manufacturer as its allocable share, had the manufacturer been a PM. Thus, by concentrating its distribution to just a few states, an NPM could recover a greater percentage of the total money it placed into escrow because those states were allowed to retain only their relatively small percentage shares. 1

*373 In order to close this loophole, Louisiana, along with every settling state except Missouri, amended the Original Escrow Provision. It now reads:

To the extent that a[NPM] establishes that the amount it was required to place into escrow on account of units sold in the state in a particular year was greater than the [MSA] payments ... that such [NPM] would have been required to make on account of such units sold had it been a[PM], the excess shall be released from escrow and revert back to such [NPM].

La.Rev.Stat. § 13:5063(C)(2)(b) (emphasis added) (the “Allocable Share Revocation” or “ASR”). The ASR establishes a limit on the amount of escrow funds that will be released back to an NPM in a particular year. By removing the “state’s allocable share” language, the ASR limits the release to the amount the NPM would have paid as a PM on the same amount of sales, rather than the State’s allocable share of this amount. For example, if an NPM makes half of its total sales in Louisiana, under the amendment, the NPM will be entitled to a release only to the extent that its escrow deposit exceeds what its MSA payment would have been on the number of cigarettes represented by half of its total sales. Instead of basing the escrow release on the fiction of national pay-in followed by a release based on the State’s allocable share, the release is tied directly to the number of cigarettes actually sold in the State.

Because Xcaliber distributes products in only a few states, it formerly utilized the loophole in the original statute, but can no longer do so post-amendment. According to Xcaliber, as a result of the ASR, the barriers against NPMs have been heightened dramatically, and the ability of an NPM to compete within a regional market has been destroyed.

Xcaliber filed suit against the Louisiana Attorney General, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief based on violations of the First Amendment and the Commerce, Equal Protection, and Due Process Clauses, and the corresponding clauses of the Louisiana Constitution. Xcaliber sought only to prevent the enforcement of the ASR. It did not seek to invalidate the entire MSA and its implementing legislation. The district court dismissed each claim under Rule 12(b)(6).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
612 F.3d 368, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14513, 2010 WL 2773431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/xcaliber-international-limited-v-attorney-general-ca5-2010.