Case: 09-30985 Document: 00511199014 Page: 1 Date Filed: 08/10/2010
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
August 10, 2010
No. 09-30985 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
S&M BRANDS INC.; TOBACCO DISCOUNT HOUSE #1 INC.; MARK
HEACOCK,
Plaintiffs - Appellants
v.
JAMES D. "BUDDY" CALDWELL, in his official capacity as Attorney
General State of Louisiana,
Defendant - Appellee
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Louisiana
Before DAVIS, SMITH, and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.
W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor
of the Attorney General of Louisiana. This case arises out of the Master
Settlement Agreement (“MSA”) reached in the 1990s between the four largest
tobacco manufacturers and the several states. The plaintiffs—who are not
signatories to the MSA—sued the Louisiana Attorney General, alleging that the
MSA and the Louisiana Escrow Statute, L A. R EV. S TAT. § 13:5061, et seq., violate
the Compact Clause, First Amendment, Federal Cigarette Labeling and
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Advertising Act (“FCLAA”), Commerce and Due Process Clauses, and federal
antitrust laws. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM.
I.
In 1994, several states, including Louisiana, brought lawsuits against the
four largest tobacco manufacturers: Philip Morris, R.J. Reynolds, Lorillard, and
Brown & Williamson (collectively referred to as the Original Participating
Manufacturers “OPMs”). The states alleged that the OPMs’ tobacco products,
as well as the marketing related to their tobacco products, cost the states billions
of dollars in increased health care costs.
In 1998, the OPMs reached a settlement agreement, the MSA, with fifty-
two governmental entities (collectively referred to as the “Settling States”),
including Louisiana. The MSA released the OPMs from past, present, and
future tobacco-related legal claims. In return, the OPMs were prohibited from
participating in certain types of tobacco-related state and federal lobbying,
engaging in litigation adverse to the MSA or its enacting state statutes, and
various types of advertising. The OPMs also were required to make annual
payments into a fund (hereinafter “the MSA fund”) based on their present
market share. Money paid into the MSA fund is paid out in fixed shares to the
individual Settling States.
Smaller tobacco manufacturers that were not part of the OPMs were
permitted to join the MSA as Subsequent Participating Manufacturers (“SPMs”).
The MSA created two groups of SPMs. The first group (hereinafter the
“grandfathered SPMs”) included those SPMs that signed on to the MSA within
the first 90 days of its execution. As a means of encouraging smaller tobacco
manufacturers to become grandfathered SPMs, the MSA provides that
grandfathered SPMs do not have to pay into the MSA fund, so long as their
market share does not exceed the greater of their 1998 sales or 125% of their
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1997 sales. The second group (hereinafter the “non-grandfathered SPMs”) are
those SPMs that joined the MSA after 90 days of its execution. Non-
grandfathered SPMs must pay into the MSA fund based on their annual market
share, but unlike grandfathered SPMs, they need not remain at the same
market size as when the MSA was executed. Both grandfathered SPMs and
non-grandfathered SPMs must abide by the aforementioned prohibitions in
lobbying, litigation, and advertising that OPMs are subject to under the MSA.
In return for the above concessions, the MSA encourages, but does not
demand, that the Settling States pass a Model Statute (hereinafter the “Escrow
Statute”). The Escrow Statute requires that tobacco manufacturers not
participating in the MSA (referred to as Non-Participating Manufacturers
(“NPMs”)) and selling tobacco products in the state either (1) join the MSA or (2)
make an annual deposit into a qualified escrow account based on the quantity
of cigarettes the NPM sold in the state during the previous calendar year. To
encourage the Settling States to pass the Escrow Statute, the NPM Adjustment
was created. The MSA provides that if any of the OPMs, grandfathered SPMs,
or non-grandfathered SPMs (collectively the “PMs”) lose its market share, a
nationally-recognized firm of economists will be hired to determine whether the
loss in market share is due to the aforementioned restraints in lobbying,
litigation, and advertising required by the MSA. If those restraints are
determined by the economists to be a significant factor contributing to the loss
of market share, then the PM may reduce the amount it pays into the MSA fund.
This reduction is the NPM Adjustment, which is borne only by the Settling
States that have not enacted the Escrow Statute. Louisiana enacted an Escrow
Statute, L A. R EV. S TAT. § 13:5061, et seq. Under the Louisiana Escrow Statute,
if an NPM fails to join the MSA or fails to make the appropriate annual deposit
into a qualified escrow account, the NPM is subject to civil and criminal
penalties. L A. R EV. S TAT. §§ 13:5073, 5076. However, if an NPM pays more to
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the qualified escrow account than it would have to pay if it were a non-
grandfathered SPM, the NPM is entitled to a refund of the excess amount it
paid. L A. R EV. S TAT. § 13:5063(C)(2)(b).
II.
Since its implementation, several NPMs and smokers have challenged the
validity of the MSA and state Escrow Statutes before a number of courts,
including, most recently, this court.1 This case is yet another challenge to the
MSA and Louisiana Escrow Statute.
The plaintiffs 2 filed suit against the defendant, Louisiana Attorney
General Buddy Caldwell, seeking to invalidate the MSA and Louisiana Escrow
Statute on the grounds that they were unconstitutional because they violated
the Compact Clause, the First Amendment, the Commerce Clause, and the Due
Process Clause. The plaintiffs further alleged the MSA and Escrow Statute
violated federal antitrust laws, the FCLAA, and the Bankruptcy Code.
Following proceedings before the district court, both parties filed motions
for summary judgment. Finding there were no genuine issues of material fact,
and that the plaintiffs’ claims failed as a matter of law, the district court granted
the Attorney General’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the
plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice. The plaintiffs timely filed this appeal. On
appeal, the plaintiffs press all of the aforementioned challenges except for their
allegation that the MSA and Escrow Statute violate the Bankruptcy Code.
1
See, e.g., Xcaliber Int’l Ltd. LLC v. Caldwell, No. 09-30492, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS
14513 (5th Cir. Jul. 15, 2010); Grand River Enters. Six Nations v. Beebe, 574 F.3d 929 (8th Cir.
2009); KT&G Corp. v. Six, 535 F.3d 1114 (10th Cir. 2008); Grand River Enters. Six Nations
v. Pryor, 425 F.3d 158 (2d Cir. 2005); Star Sci., Inc. v. Beales, 278 F.3d 339 (4th Cir. 2002).
2
The specific parties in this case include a cigarette manufacturer who has not joined
the MSA, i.e. an NPM (S&M Brands, Inc.), a cigarette dealer (Tobacco Discount House #1), and
a smoker (Mark Heacock) (collectively, “the plaintiffs”).
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We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Breaux
v. Halliburton Energy Services, 562 F.3d 358, 364 (5th Cir. 2009) (citing LeMaire
v. La. Dep’t of Transp. & Dev., 480 F.3d 383, 386 (5th Cir. 2007)).
III.
We first address the plaintiffs’ assertion that the MSA violates the
Compact Clause, U.S. C ONST., Art. I, § 10, cl. 3, because it is an agreement
among the Settling States that has the potential to interfere with the plaintiffs’
constitutional rights and has not been approved by Congress. The district court
found that the proper analysis to determine whether congressional approval is
required under the Compact Clause is the test provided in United States Steel
Corp. v. Multistate Tax Commission, 434 U.S. 452, 473 (1978): “whether the
Compact enhances state power quoad the National Government.” Because the
MSA only increases states’ power vis-a-vis the PMs and not in relation to the
federal government, the district court concluded there was no violation of the
Compact Clause.
The Fourth Circuit in Star Sci. reached this same end. See 278 F.3d at
359–60. The Star Sci. court stated:
Although the Master Settlement Agreement implicates the Compact
Clause, we see no reason to conclude that it encroaches on federal
power. In Multi-State Tax Commission, the Supreme Court upheld
a compact resulting in reciprocal State legislation and establishing
an administrative body to coordinate State taxation of certain
entities. The Court noted that the compact might result in an
increase in bargaining power of the member States with respect to
the corporations subject to their taxing jurisdictions, but it found
such an increase in power to be acceptable because “the test is
whether the Compact enhances state power quoad the National
Government.” Similarly, the Master Settlement Agreement may
result in an increase in bargaining power of the States vis-a-vis the
tobacco manufacturers, but this increase in power does not interfere
with federal supremacy because the Master Settlement Agreement
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“does not purport to authorize the member States to exercise any
powers they could not exercise in its absence.”
278 F.3d at 360. See also VIBO Corp. v. Conway, 594 F. Supp. 2d 758, 785–86
(W.D. Ky. 2009) (finding that the MSA does not violate the Compact Clause
because “[a]n increase in the states’ collective bargaining power does not result
in an accompanying decrease of federal power”).
We agree with the reasoning expressed by the Fourth Circuit and the
district court in the instant case, and accordingly find no merit in the plaintiffs’
Compact Clause challenge.
IV.
The plaintiffs also argue that the MSA and Escrow Statute are per se
violations of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, because the structure of the MSA
creates a national cigarette cartel designed to increase the prices paid out to the
OPMs and protect the OPMs market share. The plaintiffs further assert that
the only defense potentially available to the Attorney General is the implied
state-action immunity found under Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341 (1943), but
that such immunity does not apply in this case where Louisiana acted as a
private player when it entered an agreement with other states and the OPMs to
restrain trade.
The plaintiffs’ argument that the Escrow Statute is a per se violation of the
Sherman Act is foreclosed by this court’s recent decision in Xcaliber. The
Xcaliber court concluded that the Escrow Statute did not “mandate or authorize
conduct that necessarily constitutes a violation of the antitrust laws in all cases.”
2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14513, at *14 (quoting Rice v. Norman Williams Co., 458
U.S. 654, 661 (1982)). Moreover, the Xcaliber court found that the Escrow
Statute did not “pressure [NPMs] to conspire together to set a specific price, to
carve up markets, or otherwise to violate antitrust law.” Id. (citation omitted).
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Thus, this court’s precedent in Xcaliber precludes the plaintiffs’ argument that
the Escrow Statute violates the Sherman Act.
This court’s decision in Xcaliber, however, does not complete our antitrust
analysis. In Xcaliber, the court was faced with a challenge to only the Escrow
Statute. See id. at *12 n.5. In the present case, the plaintiffs challenge both the
Escrow Statute and the MSA. Thus, we must also consider whether the MSA
and Escrow Statute working together create an antitrust violation.
Whether the MSA and Escrow Statute violate federal antitrust laws has
been addressed by the Sixth, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits, and all of those courts
have rejected the plaintiffs’ arguments. See Grand River Enters. Six Nations,
574 F.3d at 936–38; Sanders v. Brown, 504 F.3d 903, 908–11 (9th Cir. 2007);
Tritent Int’l Corp. v. Kentucky, 467 F.3d 547, 557 (6th Cir. 2006). See also S&M
Brands, Inc. v. Summers, 393 F. Supp. 2d 604, 622 (M.D. Tenn. 2005), aff’d by,
S&M Brands, Inc. v. Summers, 228 F. App’x 560 (6th Cir. 2007) (finding that the
MSA and Escrow Statute were immune from challenge on antitrust grounds
under the state-action doctrine). The Sixth Circuit in Tritent aptly described the
argument the present plaintiffs raise and why it must be rejected:
The PMs’ practice of increasing cigarette prices, thus keeping sales
volume down, has allowed them to maintain a stable market share.
This has resulted in lower payments to the settling states. If
Tritent and the other NPMs had chosen not to raise their prices in
response to the PMs’ price increase, the NPMs’ market share would
have presumably increased, but this would have subjected them to
higher payments under the Escrow Statute. Kentucky’s current
statutory scheme . . . thus provides a disincentive for the NPMs to
engage in price competition with the PMs. The genesis of this
anticompetitive behavior, however, stemmed neither from the MSA
nor the complementary legislation that Kentucky enacted to give
effect to the MSA’s provisions. Instead, the behavior with which
Tritent really takes issue is the behavior of the PMs following the
MSA’s enactment. Because such behavior was neither mandated
nor explicitly authorized by the state of Kentucky, McNeilus [Truck
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& Mfg., Inc. v. State ex rel. Montgomery, 226 F.3d 429 (6th Cir.
2000)] forecloses Tritent’s argument on this issue.
467 F.3d at 557.
We agree with the Sixth Circuit and the other circuits that have already
considered the issue of whether the MSA and Escrow Statute violate the
Sherman Act, and we adopt their rationale. Accordingly, we find no merit to the
plaintiffs arguments that the MSA and Escrow Statute violate federal antitrust
laws.
V.
The plaintiffs also briefly argue that the MSA and Escrow Statute violate
the Commerce Clause and Due Process Clause because they create
extraterritorial price increases.
The plaintiffs’ claims have been soundly rejected by the Fourth, Eighth,
and Tenth Circuits. See Grand River Enters. Six Nations, 574 F.3d at 943–44;
KT&G Corp., 535 F.3d at 1145–46; Star Sci., Inc., 278 F.3d at 356–57. In
examining whether the Arkansas Escrow Statute created extraterritorial price
increases, the Eighth Circuit stated,
NPM escrow payments are entirely a function of an NPM’s sales in
Arkansas. The payments are not based on nationwide sales. Nor
has there been a showing by appellants that escrow payments by
NPMs in Arkansas have any effect, either directly or indirectly, on
cigarette prices in other states. NPMs must make escrow payments
to Arkansas based on that NPM’s cigarette sales in Arkansas.
Arkansas has no control over cigarette prices in other states. The
MSA calculates an NPM’s hypothetical MSA payment in order to
refund the excess back to that NPM, but it does not allow Arkansas
to control commerce in other states.
Grand River Enters. Six Nations, 574 F.3d at 944. We agree with the Eighth
Circuit’s analysis. The Louisiana Escrow Statute and the MSA only allow
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Louisiana to regulate and collect escrow payments based on the sale of cigarettes
within Louisiana’s jurisdiction. Therefore, there is no violation of the Due
Process or Commerce Clause.
VI.
The remaining challenges brought by the plaintiffs rest on the underlying
argument that NPMs are compelled to join the MSA to avoid the economic
burdens imposed on them by the Escrow Statute. This argument, however, is
also foreclosed by this court’s recent decision in Xcaliber. In Xcaliber, the
plaintiff asserted that the Escrow Statute “makes doing business as an NPM so
unattractive that it compels NPMs to join the MSA . . . .” 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS
14513, at *28.3 The court disagreed, finding that there was no evidence that the
Louisiana Escrow Statute created a price or non-price disadvantage for NPMs.
Id. at *29–31. Because no disadvantage is created for NPMs by remaining as
NPMs, NPMs are not compelled to join the MSA. Id. at *31.
Based on the Xcaliber court’s conclusion that the Escrow Statute does not
compel NPMs to become signatories to the MSA, any argument by the plaintiffs
based on this premise is foreclosed. With this in mind, we turn to the plaintiffs’
claims that the MSA and the Louisiana Escrow Statute violate the First
Amendment, the FCLAA, the Commerce Clause and the Due Process Clause,
and antitrust laws.
A.
The plaintiffs argue that the MSA and Louisiana Escrow Statute violate
the First Amendment because the MSA directly restrains the speech of PMs by
3
In Xcaliber, the plaintiff challenged the Allocable Share Revocation (“ASR”). The ASR
was an amendment that Louisiana, and all Settling States, passed to the original escrow
statutes in order to close a loophole in the original escrow statutes that was advantageous to
NPMs. See 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 14513, at *6–7 (discussing the reason for the ASR). The
Louisiana Escrow Statute considered in the plaintiffs’ instant challenge incorporates the
alteration of the ASR.
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forbidding various forms of lobbying and petitioning activity concerning tobacco
products and the MSA itself, as well as prohibiting numerous forms of cigarette
advertising.
This same argument was raised in S&M Brands, Inc. v. Summers, 393 F.
Supp. 2d 604 (M.D. Tenn. 2005), aff’d, S&M Brands, Inc. v. Summers, 228 F.
App’x 560, 563 (6th Cir. 2007). In that case, the court stated,
The Escrow Act . . . leaves [NPMs] no worse off financially than they
would be under the MSA, because it expressly provides that [NPMs]
are entitled to a refund on any amounts paid into escrow that they
can demonstrate is in excess of the amount they would have paid
under the MSA. Further, [NPMs] retain all of the First Amendment
and other rights that the PMs gave up when they signed the MSA.
Id. at 638. See also KT&G Corp., 535 F.3d at 1134–36 (holding that an escrow
statute did not violate NPMs First Amendment rights).
We agree with this reasoning. While the MSA does restrict the speech
activities of PMs, the plaintiffs are not PMs and, as previously noted, are not
coerced to become PMs. The only statute applicable to the plaintiffs is the
Louisiana Escrow Statute, which in no way compels or abridges speech.
Therefore, we find no merit to the plaintiffs’ First Amendment claims.
B.
The FCLAA states that “[n]o requirement or prohibition based on smoking
and health shall be imposed under State law with respect to the advertising or
promotion of any cigarettes the packages of which are labeled in conformity with
the provisions of this chapter.” 15 U.S.C. § 1334(b). The plaintiffs argue that
the MSA and Escrow Statute violate the FCLAA because the FCLAA preempts
state regulations targeting cigarette advertising, and the MSA and Escrow
Statute prohibit certain forms of cigarette advertising.
This same argument has been raised and rejected in Grand River Enters.
Six Nations, Ltd. v. Pryor, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16995, at *48–50 (S.D.N.Y.
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2003), aff’d by, Grand River Enters Six Nations, Ltd., 425 F.3d at 175, and PTI,
Inc. v. Philip Morris Inc., 100 F. Supp. 2d 1179, 1205 (C.D. Cal. 2000). Like the
district court below, we agree with the rationale expressed in those decisions.
The plaintiffs are not compelled to join the MSA and the Louisiana Escrow
Statute “does not have any connection whatsoever with cigarette packaging,
advertising, or promotion.” PTI, Inc., 100 F. Supp. 2d at 1205. Therefore, the
plaintiffs’ FCLAA argument must fail.
CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary
judgment in favor of the Attorney General.
AFFIRMED.
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