FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
February 18, 2009
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
CHRISTY SPORTS, LLC, a Colorado
Limited Liability Company,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 07-4198
DEER VALLEY RESORT
COMPANY, LTD., a Utah Limited
Partnership,
Defendant-Appellee.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
(D.C. NO. 06-CV-964-DAK)
Thomas P. McMahon, Jones & Keller, P.C., Denver, Colorado (Steven G. Loosle,
Kruse Landa Maycock & Ricks, LLC, Salt Lake City, Utah, with him on the
briefs), for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Gordon Strachan, Strachan, Strachan, & Simon, P.C., Park City, Utah (Kevin J.
Simon, with him on the brief), for Defendant-Appellee.
Before McCONNELL, EBEL, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
McCONNELL, Circuit Judge.
When the Deer Valley Resort Company (“DVRC”) was developing its
world-renowned ski resort in the Wasatch Mountains, it sold parcels of land
within the resort village to third parties, while reserving the right of approval over
the conduct of certain ancillary businesses on the property, including ski rentals.
For about fifteen years, DVRC granted permission to Cole Sports and plaintiff-
appellant Christy Sports to rent skis in competition with its own ski rental outlet.
More recently, however, DVRC revoked that permission, presumably in order to
gain more business for its own newly-opened mid-mountain ski rental store. The
question is whether this revocation violated the antitrust laws. We conclude that
it did not.
I. Background
Deer Valley is one of three resorts in the vicinity of Park City, Utah.
Many—indeed, “the vast majority,” according to the Complaint, ¶ 25—of Deer
Valley’s patrons are destination skiers who fly into Salt Lake City and then take a
forty-five minute bus or shuttle ride to the resort. The resort itself is divided into
two areas: the base area, located at the bottom of the mountain, and the ritzier
mid-mountain village, located halfway up the slope. DVRC has always been the
sole provider of ski rentals at the base area, but at the mid-mountain village,
Christy and Cole Sports have operated rental facilities; DVRC itself opened a
mid-mountain ski rental facility in 2005.
Originally, DVRC owned all the property at the mid-mountain village, but
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over the years it has sold parcels to third parties. In 1990, DVRC sold one such
parcel to S.Y. and Betty Kimball, subject to a restrictive covenant that prohibited
use of the property for either ski rental or real estate sales office purposes without
DVRC’s express written consent. The Kimballs built a commercial building and
leased space in it to Christy’s corporate predecessor, Bulrich Corporation. The
lease expressly prohibited both the rental of skis and the operation of a real estate
office. The next year, though, DVRC gave Bulrich permission to rent skis in
return for 15% of the rental revenue. When Bulrich merged with another
company in 1994 and formed Christy Sports, LLC, Christy continued to operate
the rental business. According to the complaint, Christy stopped paying DVRC
15% of its rental revenue in 1995, though the reason for this change is unknown.
Christy rented skis at the Deer Valley mid-mountain village with no objection
from DVRC until 2005. During that time, DVRC was the sole purveyor of rental
skis at the base area but did not have a ski rental operation at mid-mountain.
DVRC opened a mid-mountain ski rental outlet in 2005. In August of that
year, the resort notified Christy that, beginning the following year’s ski season,
the restrictive covenant would be enforced and Christy would no longer be
allowed to rent skis. Christy believes that DVRC issued the same message to
Cole’s, leaving DVRC as the only rental ski provider at Deer Valley, with the
exception of a small operation at the Stein Eriksen Lodge, which serves its own
lodgers. This leaves that majority of skiers who fly into Salt Lake City and then
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shuttle to Deer Valley with few choices: they can carry unwieldy ski equipment
onto the plane, 1 take a shuttle into Park City and hunt for cheaper ski rentals in
town, or rent from the more conveniently located DVRC location. Christy
predicts, not improbably, that most consumers will choose the third option.
Christy argues that DVRC’s decision to begin enforcing its restrictive
covenant is an attempt to monopolize the market of ski rentals available to
destination skiers in Deer Valley, or, alternatively, to the destination skiers in the
mid-mountain village itself. It alleges that by eliminating its competitors, DVRC
will be able to increase prices and reduce output, thus harming consumers. The
complaint states that the number of skis available for rental mid-mountain will
decline by 620 pairs, and the price will increase by at least twenty-two to thirty-
two percent.
The district court dismissed Christy’s antitrust complaints. In this appeal,
Christy challenges only the dismissal of its claims under § 2 of the Sherman Act.
II. Analysis
We review the grant of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss de novo. Teigen
1
We decline Christy’s request to take judicial notice of newspaper stories
reporting that airlines have made it more difficult and costly for passengers to
transport their skis. Whether or not such materials would be admissible in district
court, this is an appeal of an order dismissing the complaint at the pleading stage.
The question before this court is whether the complaint states a claim upon which
relief may be granted. For that purpose, we assume that the factual allegations of
the complaint are true, and are not concerned with evidence that the parties might
bring supporting or challenging those allegations.
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v. Renfrow, 511 F.3d 1072, 1078 (10th Cir. 2007). In doing so, we ask whether
there is “plausibility in [the] complaint.” Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550
U.S. 544, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 1970 (2007). The complaint “does not need detailed
factual allegations,” id. at 1964, but the “[f]actual allegations must be enough to
raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” Id. at 1965. When, in
Twombly, the Supreme Court emphasized the need for plausibility in the
complaint rather than “wholly conclusory statement[s],” id. at 1966–67, it warned
particularly of the high costs and frequent abuses associated with antitrust
discovery. Id. at 1959 (“It is one thing to be cautious before dismissing an
antitrust complaint in advance of discovery, but quite another to forget that
proceeding to antitrust discovery can be expensive.”) (internal citations omitted).
The concept of “plausibility” at the dismissal stage refers not to whether the
allegations are likely to be true; the court must assume them to be true. The
question is whether, if the allegations are true, it is plausible and not merely
possible that the plaintiff is entitled to relief under the relevant law. Robbins v.
Oklahoma, 519 F.3d 1242, 1247 (10th Cir. 2008).
Christy has alleged that DVRC violated § 2 of the Sherman Act by either
actual or attempted monopolization. “The offense of monopoly under § 2 of the
Sherman Act has two elements: (1) the possession of monopoly power in the
relevant market and (2) the willful acquisition or maintenance of that power.”
United States v. Grinnell Corp., 384 U.S. 563, 570–71 (1966). Similarly, an
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attempt claim must show “(1) that the defendant has engaged in predatory or
anticompetitive conduct with (2) a specific intent to monopolize and (3) a
dangerous probability of achieving monopoly power,” with the third element
requiring “consider[ation] [of] the relevant market and the defendant’s ability to
lessen or destroy competition in that market.” Spectrum Sports, Inc. v.
McQuillan, 506 U.S. 447, 456 (1993). Under both types of § 2 claims Christy
must therefore plead both power in a relevant market and anticompetitive
conduct. The relevant market, according to Christy’s complaint, is the market for
ski rentals to destination skiers in Deer Valley in general or, even more narrowly,
the market for ski rentals in the mid-mountain village. Compl. ¶ 61. The alleged
anticompetitive conduct is the enforcement of the restrictive covenant.
A great many pages in the briefs are devoted to whether the defined market
set forth in the complaint—destination skiers at Deer Valley, or alternatively at
Deer Valley’s mid-mountain village—is too small to constitute a market for
antitrust purposes, in light of the proximity of a number of ski rental outlets in
Park City, just down the road. For purposes of analyzing the complaint, however,
we find it not implausible that destination skiers who arrive at the resort by bus or
shuttle will find it sufficiently inconvenient to travel into town to rent skis that a
successful monopolist over ski rental at Deer Valley could charge
supracompetitive prices. The question, we believe, is not whether DVRC might
be able to raise prices and reduce output by becoming the only purveyor of rental
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skis at the resort, but whether such a market is legally cognizable under the
antitrust laws and whether the decision of a resort owner to reserve to itself the
right to provide ancillary services counts as anticompetitive conduct.
The defendant argues that these issues must be analyzed primarily from the
temporal perspective of DVRC’s decision to impose a restrictive covenant on the
sale of the property to the Kimballs. It points out that DVRC had the right not to
sell the property at issue at all; it could have operated its own ski rental facilities
at mid-mountain as it did at the base, without allowing competitors to enter the
business. None of this would have violated the antitrust laws. Such an
arrangement would not have diminished competition; on the contrary, by creating
a resort and providing all the services ancillary to it, DVRC increased competition
in the ski industry as a whole. The defendant argues that the analysis is the same
when it allows an outside ski rental provider to operate for a period of time, and
later changes its mind. If it is permissible for a resort owner to impose a
covenant on land sales restricting potential competition in the provision of
ancillary services, defendants argue, it must be permissible to exercise those
rights under the covenant at a later date.
The plaintiff argues, on the contrary, that the temporal focus should be on
DVRC’s decision to withdraw its consent to the operation of Cole and Christy’s
ski rental facilities. It argues that this decision diminished competition in the ski
rental business for destination skiers at Deer Valley (or, alternatively, at mid-
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mountain), and will result in lowered output and higher prices for ski rentals, as
compared to the situation before DVRC withdrew its consent.
We begin our analysis with DVRC’s original decision to impose the
restrictive covenant.
A. Imposition of the Restrictive Covenant
We agree with the defendant that the creator of a resort has no obligation
under the antitrust laws to allow competitive suppliers of ancillary services on its
property. A theme park, for example, does not have to permit third parties to
open restaurants, hotels, gift shops, or other facilities within the park; it can
reserve to itself the right to conduct such businesses and receive revenues from
them. Accordingly, if it sells land within the resort to third parties, the antitrust
laws do not bar the resort owner from imposing a covenant against use of the
property for competitive businesses. This is so even if food, rooms, gifts, or other
ancillary goods and services would be cheaper and more plentiful if the resort
owner allowed competition in these businesses.
This conclusion can be reached either by reference to the proper definition
of a market or by reference to the absence of anticompetitive conduct. Some
courts, faced with cases of this sort, have found the market definition implausible.
The Seventh Circuit took this approach in Elliott v. United Center, 126 F.3d 1003
(7th Cir. 1997), when a peanut vendor challenged a sports arena’s decision to ban
outside food and thereby monopolize the market for food concessions within the
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arena. The court rejected that market definition as implausible, saying:
The logic of [the] argument would mean that exclusive restaurants
could no longer require customers to purchase their wines only at the
establishment, because the restaurant would be “monopolizing” the
sale of wine within its interior. Movie theaters, which traditionally
(and notoriously) earn a substantial portion of their revenue from the
sale of candies, popcorn, and soda, would be required by the antitrust
laws to allow patrons to bring their own food.
Id. at 1005. Other courts agree. Hospitals alleged to have monopolized the
market for medical services within that single hospital, Collins v. Associated
Pathologist, Ltd., 844, F.2d 473, 480 n.5 (7th Cir. 1988); Ginzburg v. Memorial
Healthcare Systems, Inc., 993 F.Supp. 998, 1013 (S.D. Tex. 1997), and a
cemetery alleged to have monopolized the market for tombstones within that
cemetery, Monument Builders of N.A. v. Michigan Cemetery Ass’n, 524 F.3d 726,
733–37 (6th Cir. 2008), were all declared too narrow to constitute a relevant
market. Perhaps even closer to this case is Hack v. President & Fellows of Yale
College, 237 F.3d 81, 85 (2d Cir. 2000), in which Yale University was alleged to
have monopolized the market for on-campus housing within its sprawling
complex of facilities. The Second Circuit rejected the idea that it is
impermissible for an institution to monopolize one particular product within an
establishment that provides a variety of interrelated services, the most important
one of which is education. The alleged market was too narrow.
Although discussion of sports arenas and universities seems to suggest that
Christy’s shortcomings lie with its alleged geographic market, the actual problem
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lies with its product market. In these cases the two are difficult to disentangle
because the product (rental skis, as here, or housing, as in Hack) is intimately
related to the location. Consumers do not travel to Deer Valley for rental skis,
just as they do not attend Yale to live in an Eero Saarinen-designed dormitory.
The true product in these cases is the overall experience. Deer Valley offers a
cluster of products that combine to create a destination ski experience; rental skis
are only one small component. Cf. United States v. Phillipsburg Nat. Bank &
Trust Co., 399 U.S. 350, 361 (1970) (“[T]he cluster of products and services
termed commercial banking has economic significance well beyond the various
products and services involved.”); United States v. Philadelphia Nat. Bank, 374
U.S. 321, 356 (1963) (defining the relevant market under the Clayton Act merger
analysis as “the cluster of products (various kinds of credit) and services (such as
checking accounts and trust administration) denoted by the term ‘commercial
banking’”). The complaint alleges nothing to suggest that destination skiers are
choosing their ski resort based on the price of rental skis, separate and apart from
the cluster of services associated with the destination-ski experience. To define
one small component of the overall product as the relevant product market is
simply implausible. 2
2
We should not be misread as suggesting the implausibility of a rental ski
product market within a reasonably well-defined geographic area. We simply
hold implausible Christy’s attempt to suggest a product market exists in rental
(continued...)
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Alternatively, one could say that the monopolization claim would fail
because the alleged conduct is not anticompetitive. Even if a firm has monopoly
power in a relevant market, a plaintiff must also show “the willful acquisition or
maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a
consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historic accident.”
Grinnell Corp., 384 U.S. at 570–71. Deer Valley is not required to invite
competitors onto its property to rent skis to its patrons, even if a failure to do so
would mean it is the sole supplier of rental skis at the ski area.
The Supreme Court has recognized the economic value of allowing
businesses to decide with whom they will deal, as it recently re-emphasized:
“[A]s a general matter, the Sherman Act ‘does not restrict the long recognized
right of [a] trader or manufacturer engaged in an entirely private business, freely
to exercise his own independent discretion as to parties with whom he will
deal.’” Verizon Commc’ns, Inc. v. Law Offices of Curtis V. Trinko, LLP, 540
U.S. 398, 408 (2004) (quoting United States v. Colgate & Co., 250 U.S. 300, 307
(1919)). In Trinko, the Court acknowledged that in rare circumstances a refusal
to cooperate with competitors might constitute a § 2 violation, but that “such
exceptions, because of the uncertain virtue of forced sharing and the difficulty of
identifying and remedying anticompetitive conduct by a single firm,” id., should
2
(...continued)
skis for destination skiers, disaggregated from the full destination ski experience.
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be few.
Having invested time and money in developing a premier ski resort that
attracts skiers from across the nation, DVRC could recoup its investment in a
number of ways. It could increase the price of lift tickets, raise room rates, serve
only high-priced food, or, as it seems to have chosen, delve more deeply into the
rental ski market. See Elliott, 126 F.3d at 1005 (“[The United Center] can charge
very high ticket prices, and allow unlimited numbers of food concessions in and
around the stadium, or it can charge somewhat lower ticket prices and restrict the
number of concessions (thereby earning some of its profits from the food
sales).”). This does not mean consumers have no protection. The ski resort
industry is competitive (and Christy does not allege otherwise). Families
contemplating ski vacations have many options, and they presumably compare
quality and price. If they are rational, the price they are concerned about is the
sum of all of their prospective vacation costs, including not just lift ticket prices
and resort lodging, but air fare, food and drink, apres-ski entertainment, ski
rentals, and the like. A resort that facilitates lower ski rental prices by allowing
competition is able to price other aspects of the ski vacation experience more
aggressively. The competitive discipline comes not from introducing
competition with respect to each component of the experience, but from
competition with other ski resorts with respect to the entire package. Christy has
not alleged, and it would not likely be plausible to allege, that DVRC’s decision
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to foreclose competition in the ski rental business at the mid-mountain village
will have any effect on the market for ski resort vacations as a whole.
Indeed, allowing resorts to decide for themselves what blend of vertical
integration and third party competition will produce the highest return may well
increase competition in the ski resort business as a whole, and thus benefit
consumers. This flexibility about business strategies induces entrants into the
ski resort business by allowing them to reserve the benefits of their investments
to themselves. Disneyland may have made a business miscalculation in locating
where third parties could conveniently supply hotels, restaurants, and other
services to its guests. See Elliott, 126 F.3d at 1005 (citing Jim Molnar, A Tale of
2 Disneys: Out of a Single Mouse Different Playgrounds Grew, Seattle Times,
May 19, 1991, at L1). The antitrust laws do not make such miscalculations
legally obligatory.
The idea that restrictive covenants limiting immediate competition may
promote competition in a broader market finds support in this court’s decision in
Drury Inn–Colorado Springs v. Olive Co., 878 F.2d 340 (10th Cir. 1989), a case
on which the district court below heavily relied. In Drury Inn, a motel chain
purchasing a tract of land insisted that the seller attach a restrictive covenant to a
neighboring lot that would prevent a competing motel from operating next door.
The court held that the restrictive covenant was not a per se violation of § 1 of
the Sherman Act, concluding that the arrangement was one that “merely regulates
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and perhaps thereby promotes competition.” Id. at 342. To be sure, in an
immediate sense the restrictive covenant barred competition against the motel
chain, but in a broader sense it facilitated the entry of a new market participant,
to the benefit of consumers and competition overall. Without the covenant,
Drury Inn might not have entered the market. This case is similar, in that DRVC
insisted on attaching a restrictive covenant to its sale of land to the Kimballs to
protect its future ability to profitably operate a ski rental business. Because both
the land deal and the potential opening of a ski rental business would expand the
market, the arrangement “merely regulates and perhaps thereby promotes
competition.” Id.
Drury Inn of course has differences from this case. As Christy points out,
Drury Inn was a § 1 case; the antitrust issue was raised as an affirmative defense
to a breach of contract action rather than as a freestanding antitrust claim; the
restrictive covenant was more limited in time; and the restriction operated to the
benefit of the buyer rather than the seller. But despite these surface differences,
the underlying economic logic of Drury Inn is equally applicable here: that when
a landowner divides his property and sells part to a third party while retaining
the rest, attachment of a restrictive covenant to one of the two parcels can
promote competition by enabling the owner of the other parcel to start a business
without potentially crippling competition on its doorstep. It does not matter,
legally or economically, whether the business will be started by the purchaser (as
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in Drury Inn), or the original property owner (as in our case). Just as a property
owner who operates a business on his land has no obligation to sell part of his
property to a person who intends to open a competing facility, he generally has
no obligation, if he sells part of the property, to allow a competing facility to be
opened there. See Polk Bros., Inc. v. Forest City Enters., Inc., 776 F.2d 185, 188
(7th Cir. 1985) (Easterbrook, J.) (“Antitrust law is designed to ensure an
appropriate blend of cooperation and competition, not to require all economic
actors to compete full tilt at every moment.”).
Either line of reasoning—whether based on market definition or lack of
anticompetitive conduct—leads to the same conclusion. Indeed, they are two
sides of the same coin: having created a resort destination, antitrust will not
force a resort developer to share its internal profit-making opportunities with
competitors. The relevant market requirement reaches this result by finding
implausible a market definition that singles out a small component of the cluster
of services that constitutes the actual product; the anticompetitive conduct
requirement reaches it by saying that it is not anticompetitive to refuse to grant
access to competitors.
B. Revocation of Consent to Operate a Ski Rental Facility
The plaintiff does not seriously argue that it was impermissible for DVRC
to impose the restrictive covenant back in 1990, or that it would have been
impermissible for DVRC to use its ownership of the land to bar competition in
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the ski rental business from the beginning. Rather, the plaintiff argues primarily
that, having allowed third parties to engage in the ski rental business for almost
fifteen years, DVRC violated § 2 of the Sherman Act when it revoked that
permission and took over the ski rental business for itself.
We do not see the logic in this argument. If antitrust law permits a resort
operator to organize its business in either of two ways, by providing ancillary
services itself or by allowing third parties to provide the service on a competitive
basis, we do not see why an initial decision to adopt one business model would
lock the resort into that approach and preclude adoption of the other at a later
time. Conceivably, such a change might lead to a claim under contract law or as
a business tort. We would not even preclude the theoretical possibility that such
a change could give rise to an antitrust claim, for example, if by first inviting an
investment and then disallowing the use of the investment the resort imposed
costs on a competitor that had the effect of injuring competition in a relevant
market. But there are no such allegations here. Indeed, Christy knew from the
beginning that it could operate a ski rental business only by permission of
DVRC, on a year-to-year basis. It cannot claim unfair surprise.
The closest case in support of the plaintiff’s position is Aspen Skiing Co. v.
Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp., 472 U.S. 585 (1985). In Aspen Skiing, two
companies had successfully cooperated to offer skiers joint passes to both
companies’ mountains, until the larger of those companies decided to end the
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relationship. Id. at 587–95. Indeed, it not only stopped offering the joint pass,
but, when its former partner tried to recreate the multi-mountain pass by giving
its customers vouchers equal to a price of a full day’s lift ticket, it also refused to
honor those vouchers. Id. at 593–94. The Court held that termination of the
relationship was anticompetitive. The case could be interpreted as holding that
even if a firm has the right to refuse to do business with a competitor, it may not
necessarily have the right to do so after establishing a business relationship. The
Court has since said, however, that “Aspen Skiing is at or near the outer
boundary of § 2 liability,” Trinko, 540 U.S. at 409, and noted that the key fact in
Aspen Skiing was that the defendant terminated a profitable relationship without
any economic justification, showing “a willingness to forsake short-term profits
to achieve an anticompetitive end,” id., especially when it refused to renew the
joint ticket “even if compensated at retail price.” Id. The critical fact in Aspen
Skiing was that there were no valid business reasons for the refusal.
Here, in contrast, we have no indication that DVRC is terminating a
profitable business relationship. There is no allegation that DVRC was
motivated by anything other than a desire to make more money for itself. For all
that appears from the complaint, DVRC expects to increase (not forsake) short-
term profits by operating its own ski rental facility at the mid-mountain village.
The Sherman Act does not force DVRC to assist a competitor in eating away its
own customer base, especially when that competitor is offering DVRC nothing in
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return. Moreover, by using the restrictive covenant DVRC had explicitly
informed its competitors from the beginning that the relationship could change at
any time. Unlike the competitor in Aspen Skiing, Christy should have been
aware that the relationship was temporary and subject to DVRC’s business
judgment. DVRC’s behavior does not reach the “outer boundary of § 2
liability,” id., at which Aspen Skiing lies.
At oral argument Christy argued that our opinion in Full Draw
Productions v. Easton Sports, Inc., 182 F.3d 745 (10th Cir. 1999) requires us to
view any decrease in competition as an antitrust violation, even when that
decrease represents simply a return to a formerly valid level of competition. In
that case, a group of archery manufacturers boycotted a trade show sponsored by
a trade show promoter in order to run that promoter out of business and begin
promoting shows itself. Id. at 748. The boycott organizers argued that “[their]
alleged activities were not anticompetitive because [they] actually increased the
output of exhibition space, albeit briefly, and because the output of exhibition
space merely returned to the pre-boycott level after the [competitor] failed.” Id.
at 755. We rejected that argument, saying that “the bare fact that the output of
exhibition space before and after the alleged boycott stayed the same says
nothing about whether the process in between was anticompetitive, which it
allegedly was.” Id.
Full Draw indicates only that we cannot infer the absence of
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anticompetitive behavior simply by comparing the level of raw output before and
after the alleged violation; we must still consider the underlying behavior. It
does not suggest that any decrease in the number of competitors or total output
will automatically violate the antitrust laws. The defendants in Full Draw did
not experiment with a new business plan and then return to their earlier status;
they actively changed that earlier status by driving a pre-existing competitor out
of the market. Rather than inviting a competitor into its market and then
rescinding the invitation, the Full Draw defendants actively invaded another
market through anticompetitive behavior and substantially changed what that
market looked like. Whereas DVRC returned to a position it had a right to from
the beginning, the Full Draw defendants created a position they never had a right
to in the first place.
DVRC should not be forever locked into a business decision made in 1990,
especially when it took an affirmative step to preserve its future flexibility by
bargaining for a restrictive covenant. This is so even if Christy is correct that by
enforcing the restrictive covenant DVRC could increase the price and decrease
the output of ski rentals at Deer Valley. It had the right to do so from the
beginning, and the fact that it chose to do otherwise for some time does not
eliminate that right. The antitrust laws should not be allowed to stifle a
business’s ability to experiment in how it operates, nor forbid it to change course
upon discovering a preferable path.
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C. Whether Definition of a Relevant Market Is Required
The plaintiff also argues that, having pled actual anticompetitive effects
stemming from DVRC’s enforcement of the restrictive covenant, it was not
required to plead a relevant market. It reasons that an allegation of actual
anticompetitive effects obviates any need to allege a relevant market because
such effects are direct evidence that DVRC has monopoly power. This
proposition is more commonly associated with § 1 claims, which inquire into
whether a defendant acts to restrain trade rather than to monopolize a market.
See F.T.C. v. Ind. Fed. of Dentists, 476 U.S. 447, 460–61 (1986) (“Since the
purpose of the inquiries into market definition and market power is to determine
whether an arrangement has the potential for genuine adverse effects on
competition, proof of actual detrimental effects, such as a reduction of output,
can obviate the need for an inquiry into market power, which is but a surrogate
for detrimental effects.”) (internal quotations omitted); Law v. NCAA, 134 F.3d
1010, 1019 (10th Cir. 1998). A § 1 claim and a § 2 claim are different inquiries,
though. The former prohibits “restraints of trade” that are accomplished through
concerted action, while the latter prohibits unilateral conduct but only when it
rises to the more severe offense of threatening a monopoly. “Because the
Sherman Act does not prohibit unreasonable restraints of trade as such—but only
restraints effected by a contract, combination, or conspiracy—it leaves
untouched a single firm’s anticompetitive conduct . . . that may be
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indistinguishable in economic effect from the conduct of two firms subject to § 1
liability.” Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., 467 U.S. 752, 775
(1984). See also Anserphone, Inc. v. Bell Atlantic Corp., 955 F.Supp. 418, 428
(W.D. Pa. 1996) (relying on this distinction to reject argument that
anticompetitive effects are sufficient to state a claim under § 2).
Nonetheless, at least one circuit has applied the plaintiff’s logic to the § 2
context. Re/Max Intern., Inc. v. Realty One, Inc., 173 F.3d 995, 1018 (6th Cir.
1999) (“[A]n antitrust plaintiff is not required to rely on indirect evidence of a
defendant’s monopoly power, such as high market share within a defined market,
when there is direct evidence that the defendant has actually set prices or
excluded competition.”). This circuit has neither accepted nor rejected the
theory. In two cases, Tarabishi v. McAlester Regional Hospital, 951 F.2d 1558,
1569 n.15 (10th Cir. 1991), and Reazin v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Kansas,
Inc., 899 F.2d 951, 968 n.24 (10th Cir. 1990), this court discussed the possibility
that proof of anticompetitive effects rendered definition of a relevant market
unnecessary in a § 2 case, but in both cases found it unnecessary to reach the
issue either because the plaintiffs had failed to prove detrimental effects,
Tarabashi, 951 F.2d at 1569 n.15, or because the plaintiffs had proved power in
a relevant market, Reazin, 899 F.2d at 968 n.24. We are in a similar position.
Although Christy insists that it has shown anticompetitive effects by its
allegations of a decline in quantity and increase in price of rental skis at the mid-
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mountain village, this is just a repackaging of the argument rejected above. A
resort operator’s ability to reserve to itself the operation of ancillary businesses
within the resort is not dependent on the quantity of output being as high or the
price being as low as they would be if there were competition from third parties
within the resort. It depends, instead, on either the proposition that a market that
involves only one component of an interrelated package of services is not a
relevant market for purposes of the Sherman Act or that it is not anticompetitive
conduct for a resort owner to refuse to invite competitors to supply ancillary
services within its resort. The fact (even if it is a fact, as the complaint alleges)
that fewer skis will be available for rental and that prices for rental skis will be
higher, does not refute either of these legal propositions.
The plaintiff also devotes much of its briefing to the argument that the
restrictive covenant is a “naked” rather than “ancillary” restraint, making it per
se illegal regardless of market power. This was the principal point at issue in
Drury Inn, 878 F.2d at 343, where we found a restrictive covenant ancillary
rather than naked. Christy acknowledges, however, that the naked/ancillary
restraint distinction pertains only to its § 1 claim, the appeal of which Christy
decided to withdraw subsequent to briefing. Aplt. R. Br. 14 (“Those concepts
apply only in the context of Section 1 restraint of trade claims; they do not apply
to Section 2 monopoly claims.”). Thus, now that the § 1 claim is no longer at
issue and only § 2 claims remain, we need not address whether the restrictive
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covenant is a “naked restraint.”
III. Conclusion
Because Christy Sports has failed to plead a plausible claim for either
attempted or actual monopolization under § 2 of the Sherman Act, we AFFIRM
the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim.
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