United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 01-2718
THE PODIATRIST ASSOCIATION, INC., ET AL.,
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
v.
LA CRUZ AZUL DE PUERTO RICO, INC. AND TRIPLE-S, INC.,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
[Hon. Héctor M. Laffitte, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Selya, Circuit Judge,
Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Lipez, Circuit Judge.
Kevin G. Little, with whom Law Offices of David Efron was on
brief, for appellants.
Gilberto J. Marxuach-Torrós, with whom Arturo J. García-Solá
and McConnell Valdés were on brief, for appellee La Cruz Azul de
Puerto Rico.
Luis A. Oliver-Fraticelli, with whom Fiddler, Gonzalez &
Rodriguez LLP was on brief, for appellee Triple-S, Inc.
June 12, 2003
SELYA, Circuit Judge. This antitrust case requires us to
examine the structure and operation of health-care delivery in an
era marked by a bewildering array of insurer and provider
arrangements. The plaintiffs, appellants here, represent the
interests of podiatrists in Puerto Rico. They sued La Cruz Azul de
Puerto Rico (Blue Cross) and Triple-S, Inc. (Triple-S) in the
federal district court complaining, inter alia, that the defendants
had conspired with medical doctors to exclude podiatric care from
their standard benefits packages during the period from 1995 to
1999. The district court concluded that the plaintiffs had offered
insufficient evidence that physicians controlled the plans'
policymaking functions with respect to either insurance benefits or
reimbursement rates (and, therefore, had offered insufficient
evidence of concerted action). Accordingly, the court granted
summary judgment in the defendants' favor. Relatedly, the court
dismissed a Lanham Act claim against Blue Cross. The plaintiffs
appeal from these determinations. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Except for the Lanham Act count (as to which the
allegations of the amended complaint control), we glean the
relevant facts from the summary judgment record. We draw all
reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs' favor. Griggs-Ryan v.
Smith, 904 F.2d 112, 115 (1st Cir. 1990). Our recital begins with
a roster of the protagonists, proceeds to detail the plaintiffs'
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claims and the facts upon which they rely, and then summarizes the
district court's main holdings.
A. The Protagonists.
The plaintiffs include the Podiatrist Association (a non-
profit trade association), a number of practicing podiatrists,
their spouses, and their conjugal partnerships. Inasmuch as the
podiatrists are the real parties in interest, we shall discuss the
matters sub judice as if they were the sole plaintiffs.
Podiatrists are licensed health-care providers in Puerto
Rico (as elsewhere). They afford medical care to the foot and
lower extremities. Podiatrists attend four-year schools of
podiatric medicine. Those who successfully complete the curriculum
are awarded D.P.M. degrees and become doctors of podiatric
medicine. Once admitted to practice, podiatrists provide services
that are similar to those offered by some medical doctors, so that
the two groups compete against each other for certain patients.
One court has suggested that podiatrists can furnish comparable
services at lower costs. See Hahn v. Or. Physicians' Serv., 868
F.2d 1022, 1032 (9th Cir. 1988). Along this line, the plaintiffs'
amended complaint alleges, albeit without supporting evidence, that
podiatrists offer services that are not only "of equal or better
quality" than those provided by medical doctors but also "generally
less expensive."
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The defendants are Puerto Rico's two major providers of
health-care insurance.1 They do not contest the plaintiffs'
allegation that Triple-S enjoys roughly 36% of Puerto Rico's health
insurance market and Blue Cross enjoys roughly 25% of that market.
Triple-S is a for-profit corporation. From 1995 forward,
its board of directors has been composed of nineteen members, eight
of whom are medical doctors. The other members include a dentist,
hospital officials, and community representatives. The board has
complete control over corporate policymaking, and all changes in
the benefits packages and reimbursement rates established by
Triple-S are subject to board approval. The executive committee,
which exercises responsibility over corporate policies between
board meetings, consists of seven board members. Since 1995, three
of those members — the president, vice-president, and secretary —
have been medical doctors. The medical director, who reports to
the board, is required by the corporation's bylaws to have an M.D.
degree.
1
Describing the defendants' product line as "insurance" is
somewhat of a misnomer. The McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. §§
1011-1015, exempts "the business of insurance" from federal
antitrust laws. Id. § 1012(b). The Supreme Court has recognized,
however, that benefit plans, although typically marketed as health
insurance, more closely resemble pre-payment plans in which the
primary objective is not to shift the risk of loss, but, rather, to
provide health-care services to subscribers. See Group Life &
Health Ins. Co. v. Royal Drug Co., 440 U.S. 205, 214-15 (1979); see
also Union Labor Life Ins. Co. v. Pireno, 458 U.S. 119, 127-29
(1982). In the aftermath of Royal Drug, courts have freely
subjected companies like Blue Cross and Triple-S to antitrust
scrutiny.
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Blue Cross has a more complicated corporate history.
Before 1998, it functioned as a non-profit corporation. Its
twenty-eight board members included seven medical doctors, seven
hospital executives, and fourteen subscriber representatives. Blue
Cross became a for-profit corporation in 1998. Upon its conversion
to for-profit status, Blue Cross established a fourteen member
board of directors. All the members represented subscribers; none
of them were medical doctors. In November of that year,
Independence Holdings, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Independence
Blue Cross, acquired a majority of its shares. At that time, the
board was pared to seven members (none of whom are medical
doctors).
When it functioned as a non-profit, Blue Cross had a fees
and contracts committee that was responsible for proposing and
evaluating benefits packages and reimbursement policies. The
committee consisted of eight members: two medical doctors, two
hospital executives, and four subscriber representatives. Blue
Cross also maintained a medical advisory committee composed of
three medical doctors (all of whom doubled in brass as board
members). Despite the existence of these committees, all major
decisions concerning benefits and reimbursement rates remained
subject to the board's approval.
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B. The Plaintiffs' Allegations.
The plaintiffs' amended complaint mounts two kinds of
claims. The first set, involving alleged antitrust violations, are
rooted in Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, and a
parallel local-law provision, 10 P.R. Laws Ann. § 258 (1997). In
a related vein, the plaintiffs charged both defendants with having
engaged in unfair business practices in violation of Section 43(a)
of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), and Article 1802 of the
Civil Code, 31 P.R. Laws Ann. § 5141 (1990).
The plaintiffs' antitrust claims start with the premise
that the defendants have favored medical doctors by excluding
podiatrists, podiatric care, and ancillary services essential to
podiatric care from their basic health insurance coverages; that
even when podiatric care is covered, the defendants reimburse
podiatrists at lower rates than those paid to medical doctors for
comparable services; and that many patients who are in need of foot
care turn to medical doctors rather than podiatrists. The
plaintiffs further aver that this favoritism is no accident: in
their view, the defendants and the internal decisionmaking
processes used to formulate their benefits packages have been
dominated by medical doctors, so that the discrimination that
permeates the plans' activities is the outgrowth of a conspiracy
that has placed anticompetitive restraints on trade. These
restraints operate, the plaintiffs say, to increase prices
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(diverting patients to more expensive treatment, i.e., treatment by
medical doctors), decrease output (driving some patients to forgo
podiatric care altogether), and curtail podiatrists' earnings.
In support of these antitrust claims, the plaintiffs
point to the following evidence. First, they remark that
physicians have served on the defendants' boards of directors and
have occupied key decisionmaking positions within the defendants'
organizational structures. In contrast, no podiatrist has ever
participated in either defendant's governance apparatus. Second,
the plaintiffs identify specific meetings in which the defendants'
exclusionary benefits policies were discussed and approved. They
assert that those meetings were dominated by physicians.
The second type of claim mounted by the plaintiffs
accuses the defendants of making false representations regarding
the quality of podiatric care. In this regard, the plaintiffs
allege that the defendants spread misinformation to subscribers
regarding the competency of podiatrists, the relative
professionalism of podiatrists vis-à-vis medical doctors, and the
limited availability of reimbursement for podiatric care. The
plaintiffs claim that these disparaging comments caused them both
economic loss and reputational damage.
The current dispute is emblematic of the nationwide
conflict between physicians and other participants in the health-
care market. See, e.g., Flegel v. Christian Hosp., 4 F.3d 682 (8th
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Cir. 1993); Bhan v. NME Hosps., Inc., 929 F.2d 1404 (9th Cir.
1991); Va. Acad. of Clinical Psychologists v. Blue Shield, 624 F.2d
476 (4th Cir. 1980). Podiatrists have long been part of this
conflict. In the past, they have accused physicians of employing
anticompetitive means to place hospital staff privileges beyond
their reach, e.g., Cooper v. Forsyth County Hosp. Auth., Inc., 789
F.2d 278, 279 (4th Cir. 1986), battled with physician-dominated
boards to determine what podiatric services qualify for Medicare
reimbursement, e.g., Conn. State Med. Soc'y v. Conn. Bd. of Exam'rs
in Podiatry, 524 A.2d 636, 637-38 (Conn. 1987), and fought against
perceived conspiracies to exclude podiatric care from insurance
coverage, e.g., Hahn, 868 F.2d at 1024-25. Consequently, we are
able to view the current hostilities through the prism of a
significant body of case law.
C. Travel of the Case.
The plaintiffs sued on December 9, 1999, and filed an
amended complaint on March 28, 2000. Shortly thereafter, Blue
Cross moved for summary judgment with respect to the antitrust
claims and for dismissal of the remaining claims. The district
court permitted the plaintiffs to undertake discovery on the issues
raised in the summary judgment motion. While those motions were
pending, Triple-S moved for summary judgment on all claims asserted
against it. The parties appear to have assumed that discovery
could go forward on the issues framed by this motion.
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On September 19, 2001, the district court, in two
parallel opinions, granted substantially all the relief requested
by the defendants. See Podiatrist Ass'n, Inc. v. Cruz Azul de
P.R., Inc., No. 99-2336 (D.P.R. Sept. 19, 2001) (unpublished);
Podiatrist Ass'n, Inc. v. Triple-S, Inc., No. 99-2336 (D.P.R. Sept.
19, 2001) (unpublished). In each instance, the court focused its
antitrust analysis on the issue of whether physicians controlled
the particular defendant's benefits policies and concluded that the
plaintiffs had failed to show such control. The court also granted
summary judgment for Triple-S on the Lanham Act count. As to Blue
Cross, the court determined that the plaintiffs had failed to state
an actionable Lanham Act claim and granted that defendant's motion
to dismiss. Moreover, the court determined that issue had not
properly been joined on certain claims against Triple-S, see infra
Part II(C), and left those claims for later resolution.
Having disposed of most of the causes of action asserted
under federal law, the court declined to exercise supplemental
jurisdiction over the claims asserted under Article 1802 of the
Civil Code. Those claims were dismissed without prejudice. See 28
U.S.C. § 1367(c); see also Martinez v. Colon, 54 F.3d 980, 990 (1st
Cir. 1995) (upholding dismissal without prejudice of pendent local-
law claims when the district court determined "far in advance of
trial that no legitimate federal question existed"). After the
plaintiffs dropped the residuum of potential federal claims against
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Triple-S (a matter to which we shall return), this timely appeal
ensued.
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal, the plaintiffs hawk several assignments of
error. First, they challenge the district court's resolution of
the "physician control" issue. Second, they maintain that the
lower court evaluated only one of a myriad of antitrust theories
set forth in their amended complaint. Finally, they contend that
the court improperly granted Blue Cross's motion to dismiss the
Lanham Act claim. We first confront the arguments relating to the
antitrust claims and then discuss the district court's disposition
of the Lanham Act claim.2
A. The Principal Antitrust Claim.
Section 1 of the Sherman Act prohibits "[e]very contract,
combination . . . or conspiracy, in restraint of trade." 15 U.S.C.
§ 1. That language establishes two prerequisites for a Section 1
claim. First, the plaintiff must show concerted action between two
or more separate parties. Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp.,
465 U.S. 752, 761 (1984). Second, the plaintiff must show that
such action unreasonably restrains trade. Nynex Corp. v. Discon,
Inc., 525 U.S. 128, 133 (1998). The district court restricted its
analysis to the first of these prerequisites, finding insufficient
2
The plaintiffs do not appeal the entry of summary judgment in
favor of Triple-S on the Lanham Act claim. Consequently, we limit
our Lanham Act discussion to the claim against Blue Cross.
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evidence to support the plaintiffs' allegation that the defendants'
benefits policies were born out of concerted action. We test this
conclusion against the summary judgment standard.
1. The Standard of Review. The role of summary judgment
is "to pierce the pleadings and to assess the proof in order to see
whether there is a genuine need for trial." Garside v. Osco Drug,
Inc., 895 F.2d 46, 50 (1st Cir. 1990) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56
advisory committee's note). Thus, summary judgment is appropriate
as long as "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories,
and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show
that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56(c).
We afford plenary review to orders granting or denying
summary judgment. Garside, 895 F.2d at 48. Like the district
court, we "must view the entire record in the light most hospitable
to the party opposing summary judgment, indulging all reasonable
inferences in that party's favor." Griggs-Ryan, 904 F.2d at 115.
Despite this favorable presumption, the evidence relied upon by the
party opposing summary judgment must suffice to show a genuine
issue of material fact, that is, a bona fide dispute about a fact
that has the potential of affecting the outcome of the case under
the applicable law. United States v. One Parcel of Real Prop.
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(Great Harbor Neck, New Shoreham, R.I.), 960 F.2d 200, 204 (1st
Cir. 1992).
To be sure, the Supreme Court has cautioned that, in
antitrust cases, "dismissals prior to giving the plaintiff ample
opportunity for discovery should be granted very sparingly." Hosp.
Bldg. Co. v. Trustees of Rex Hosp., 425 U.S. 738, 746 (1976)
(discussing Poller v. Columbia Broad. Sys., Inc., 368 U.S. 464, 473
(1962)). This does not mean, however, that summary judgment is
unavailable in antitrust cases. See First Nat'l Bank v. Cities
Serv. Co., 391 U.S. 253, 289-90 (1968); see also Texaco P.R., Inc.
v. Medina, 834 F.2d 242, 247 (1st Cir. 1987) (noting that "the
courts, including the Supreme Court, now more freely approve" the
use of summary judgment in such cases). More to the point, the
doctrine has no force in cases in which the plaintiff has been
afforded sufficient opportunity for discovery. See, e.g.,
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574,
585-87 (1986). This is such a case.
2. Sufficiency of the Evidence. Against this backdrop,
we turn to the plaintiffs' basic allegation: that the evidence
supports a finding of an anticompetitive conspiracy between and
among those physicians who served on the defendants' boards and the
defendants themselves. This allegation does not get them very far,
for the Supreme Court has largely dismissed the possibility of an
intraenterprise conspiracy as a basis for liability under Section
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1 of the Sherman Act. See Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube
Corp., 467 U.S. 752 (1984); see also VII Phillip E. Areeda &
Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law ¶ 1470 (2d ed. 2003) (describing
as "universally accepted" the proposition that "a corporate officer
cannot conspire with his own corporation"). In other words,
agreements between two or more actors who operate within and for
the benefit of a single economic enterprise do not satisfy the
concerted action requirement of Section 1. Copperweld, 467 U.S. at
769.
That does not end our inquiry, for the Copperweld Court
intended to exempt conduct from the rigors of Section 1 only when
the actors, collectively, "pursue[] the common interests of the
whole rather than interests separate from those of the corporation
itself." Id. at 770. A different analysis is required when the
alleged coconspirators, regardless of their status, pursue
interests that diverge from those of the enterprise itself.
Sullivan v. Nat'l Football League, 34 F.3d 1091, 1099 (1st Cir.
1994); VII Areeda & Hovenkamp, supra, ¶¶ 1471a, 1471e2. This
nuance does not help the plaintiffs in this case because they have
not submitted any evidence suggesting that physicians on either
board have their own agendas or harbor private economic interests
distinct from those of the corporations themselves. Inasmuch as
nothing in the record lends support to a conclusion that those
physicians acted as independent, self-interested economic agents,
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the plaintiffs have not articulated a claim that involves anything
more than activity occurring within a single enterprise. As we
have said, such a claim falls within the sphere of Copperweld
preclusion (and, accordingly, fails to articulate a viable
antitrust claim).
In a variation on this theme, the plaintiffs argue that
physicians controlled the defendants and their benefits policies,
so that each defendant was little more than a corporate carapace
housing a conspiracy among physicians. According to this argument,
the defendants' benefits policies were products of the antecedent
conspiracy.
This argument focuses our attention on the issue of
physician control. After all, when competing health-care providers
challenge an insurer's benefits policies, alleging exclusionary
practices instigated by physicians, those providers must make a
threshold showing that the physicians effectively control the
health-care plan. Hahn, 868 F.2d at 1029; Pa. Dental Ass'n v. Med.
Serv. Ass'n, 745 F.2d 248, 256 (3d Cir. 1984); Va. Acad. of
Clinical Psychologists, 624 F.2d at 481. This is as it should be,
for a health insurer's actions can reflect an agreement in
restraint of trade among physicians only if, and to the extent
that, the insurer is an instrumentality of the physicians'
concerted action. See VII Areeda & Hovenkamp, supra, ¶ 1475a.
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The district court characterized the inquiry as one
involving whether the physicians operated a "structural conspiracy"
within the defendants' corporate skeletons. It examined the makeup
of the defendants' boards and the identity of key decisionmakers.
Based on this appraisal, the court ruled that the record did not
contain evidence adequate to establish that physicians either
dictated the defendants' benefits policies or otherwise exercised
the requisite degree of control. The plaintiffs challenge this
assessment.
The inquiry into whether an organization represents, or
is a reflection of, the concerted action of conspiring economic
actors is a functional one. See United States v. Sealy, Inc., 388
U.S. 350, 352-53 (1967) ("[W]e look at substance rather than form
. . . [and] we are moved by the identity of the persons who act,
rather than the label of their hats."). Thus, the preferred
approach — and the one that we adopt — is to examine the
composition of a corporation's board to determine whether a
particular group has exercised (or has the ability to exercise)
majority control. See, e.g., Hahn, 868 F.2d at 1030; Pa. Dental
Ass'n, 745 F.2d at 258; Va. Acad. of Clinical Psychologists, 624
F.2d at 480.
Regarding Triple-S, the plaintiffs managed to establish
nothing more than that physicians held eight of the nineteen seats
on the board. That is a minority position — and plainly not enough
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to show control. The corporate bylaws make manifest that board
action requires a majority vote, and the physicians simply do not
constitute a majority. Nor can they achieve control under the
extant circumstances; the bylaws specify that at least ten of the
nineteen board members must at all times be non-physicians.
The plaintiffs' fallback position covers a great deal of
ground. They asseverate that physicians have enough representation
on the board to influence board decisions; that physicians play
important roles when Triple-S formulates its restrictive benefits
policies; that many key executives of Triple-S, including the board
chair and medical director, are physicians; and that physicians
occupy three of seven seats on the executive committee. This is a
mixture of unsupported conclusions and marginally relevant (but
ultimately unconvincing) facts.
The first two statements are argumentative. The mere
fact that physicians have some input into Triple-S's decisionmaking
processes does not show control. See, e.g., Barry v. Blue Cross,
805 F.2d 866, 868-69 (9th Cir. 1986); Pa. Dental Ass'n, 745 F.2d at
258. Without hard proof that physician input metamorphosed into
physician dominance — and the summary judgment record contains none
— these exhortations do not advance the plaintiffs' cause.
The second two statements are factual, but not probative.
It is true that certain of Triple-S's ranking executives are
medical doctors and that three of them serve on its executive
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committee. But such facts, without more, prove very little. See
Pa. Dental Ass'n, 745 F.2d at 258 (discounting the influence of
physicians serving on certain committees when corporate bylaws
vested ultimate control in the board); see also Barry, 805 F.2d at
868-69 (employing the same reasoning when company rules placed
ultimate control elsewhere).
Here, there is no "more." The plaintiffs have wholly
failed to show how the placement of these individuals translates
into control. Equally as important, they have not shown how their
placement suffices to overcome the significance and role of the
board. The corporate bylaws state unambiguously that all business
decisions and policy changes are subject to board approval, and
nothing in the record suggests that the board relinquished this
authority. Absent some probative evidence that board approval was
a rubber stamp — an ingredient that is lacking here — the antitrust
claim against Triple-S cannot stand.
The plaintiffs likewise have failed to adduce sufficient
evidence to suggest that Blue Cross is under physician control.
The record shows that, during the period from 1995 to 1998,
physicians constituted a distinct minority of the board (holding
seven out of twenty-eight seats). This was not fortuitous: both
the corporation's former bylaws and the relevant provisions of Law
152, 6 P.R. Laws Ann. § 43(1) (1994), demanded this minority
status. From 1998 forward, the possibility of physician control
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seems even more remote; the corporation became a for-profit entity,
and the board became a physician-free zone.
In a creative formulation, the plaintiffs attempt to
change the arithmetic by pointing out that physicians and hospital
executives collectively held half of the seats on Blue Cross's non-
profit board. This is mathematically accurate — the twenty-eight
member board included seven physicians and seven hospital
representatives — but legally irrelevant. The record is barren of
any evidence indicating that these two groups worked as a unit or
even that they shared common economic interests. Certainly, we
cannot infer as much in the absence of any proof. Physicians and
hospitals are in some respects natural enemies, squabbling over how
to divide the steadily shrinking portion of premium dollars that
insurers devote to provider reimbursement. See, e.g., Jeffrey E.
Harris, Regulation and Internal Control in Hospitals, 55 Bull. N.Y.
Acad. of Med. 88, 90-95 (1979) (discussing structural and
historical tensions pitting hospital administrators against medical
staff).
The plaintiffs' next initiative is to note that
physicians occupied certain ancillary offices, such as positions on
the fees and contracts committee and the medical committee. They
couple this with an assessment of the roles that these committees
played in Blue Cross's operations. From these facts, they argue
that physicians were responsible for the development of the
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insurer's policies. As with Triple-S, however, we can attach no
special significance to the unadorned fact of physician
participation on any committee. See Barry, 805 F.2d at 868-69; Pa.
Dental Ass'n, 745 F.2d at 258. This is especially true in light of
the bylaw provision that expressly grants the Blue Cross board "the
sole authority to set . . . the services to be offered to the
subscribers."
To sum up, the plaintiffs have failed to establish the
first foundational element of their argument. The defendants'
boards retained the ultimate say over their benefits policies and
reimbursement rates, and physicians were represented sparsely (if
at all) on these boards. By the same token, the plaintiffs have
not established that physicians exercised the requisite degree of
control over policymaking in any other fashion. Accordingly, the
district court did not err in granting summary judgment on the
plaintiffs' "structural conspiracy" antitrust claim.
Let us be perfectly clear. We base this ruling on the
plaintiffs' failure to muster evidence showing physician control.
We hasten to add, however, that for purposes of Section 1 of the
Sherman Act, control is a necessary but not a sufficient condition
for finding concerted action. See, e.g., Arizona v. Maricopa
County Med. Soc'y, 457 U.S. 332, 356 (1982); Broad. Music, Inc. v.
Columbia Broad. Sys., Inc., 441 U.S. 1, 22 (1979); see also VII
Areeda & Hovenkamp, supra, ¶ 1478. Even then, satisfying the
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concerted action requirement is but one precondition to
establishing a Section 1 violation. See, e.g., NCAA v. Bd. of
Regents, 468 U.S. 85, 98-101 (1984). This appeal, however, turns
on the question of whether physicians exercised the requisite
degree of control over the defendants to support a Section 1 claim.
Having answered that question in the negative, we take no view as
to whether any additional factors might independently preclude the
maintenance of an action under the statute.
B. The Puerto Rico Antitrust Claims.
The plaintiffs recast their Sherman Act claims as
separate causes of action under Puerto Rico's antitrust law, 10
P.R. Laws Ann. § 258. That statute prohibits "[e]very contract,
combination . . . or conspiracy in unreasonable restraint of trade
or commerce in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico." Id. Because this
language mirrors the language of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, we
have treated the two provisions as coextensive. See Caribe BMW,
Inc. v. Bayerische Motoren Werke Aktiengesellschaft, 19 F.3d 745,
754 (1st Cir. 1994); see also Pressure Vessels v. Empire Gas, 137
P.R. Dec. 497, 508-20 (1994), 37 Offic. Trans. ___, ___ [Slip Op.
Offic. Trans. at 8-20] (examining Puerto Rico's antitrust statute
and articulating its equivalency to federal law). Hence, we apply
the reasoning elucidated above and affirm the district court's
entry of summary judgment for the defendants on these claims.
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C. The Plaintiffs' Alternative Antitrust Theories.
The plaintiffs next contend that they presented three
alternative antitrust theories before the district court, namely,
(1) that the physician members of the defendants' boards were part
of an anticompetitive conspiracy that included non-physician board
members; (2) that there was a conspiracy among physicians who
influenced, though they did not control, the defendants and their
policies; and (3) that the defendants were parties to an
anticompetitive conspiracy among community-based medical doctors
who compete with podiatrists. These theories are viable, the
plaintiffs say, notwithstanding the absence of physician control
vis-à-vis the defendants. Consequently, the district court erred
in granting summary judgment on the antitrust claims.
To put these nascent claims into perspective, we examine
the record below. None of these additional theories is readily
apparent from a thoughtful reading of the amended complaint, and
neither Triple-S nor Blue Cross addressed them in their initial
summary judgment memoranda. The plaintiffs sought to widen the
playing field by mentioning the additional theories in their
oppositions to the defendants' motions. Triple-S disregarded these
allusions. Blue Cross, however, argued in a reply brief that none
of the three alternative theories, as stated, articulated a claim
upon which relief could be granted, and that, in all events, the
evidence did not support any of them.
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In allowing Blue Cross's motion for summary judgment, the
district court deemed these alternative theories to be within the
umbrella of the plaintiffs' "structural conspiracy" claim. The
court did, however, entertain the possibility that the third theory
amounted to a separate claim but ruled that the plaintiffs' failure
to provide any semblance of detail doomed it. The court handled
the matter differently in regard to Triple-S. Because that
defendant, unlike Blue Cross, had not responded to the plaintiffs'
belated exposition, the district court allowed the alternative
theories to survive as against Triple-S. The plaintiffs later
stipulated to dismissal without prejudice of the residuum of these
claims vis-à-vis Triple-S. We must deal, therefore, only with the
three alternative theories as they affect Blue Cross.
This motley need not detain us long. The first
alternative theory suggests the existence of a physician-dominated
conspiracy that included non-physicians (and, thus, constituted a
majority of the Blue Cross board sufficient to exercise control).
But this theory is not anchored in the record. The plaintiffs have
neither identified a single non-physician participant in this
alleged cabal nor otherwise furnished even a scintilla of
evidentiary detail. Because the claim relies solely on unsupported
conjecture, it cannot withstand summary judgment. See Medina-Munoz
v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 896 F.2d 5, 8 (1st Cir. 1990).
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The plaintiffs' second alternative theory suggests that
a minority coalition of physicians unduly influenced the
formulation of Blue Cross's benefits packages. That claim is
factually unsupported, and we swiftly discard it based on the logic
previously articulated. See supra Part II(A)(2).
The third alternative theory, like the first two, is a
barebones allegation wrapped in the gossamer strands of speculation
and surmise. The plaintiffs have neither identified a single
physician outside Blue Cross who is part of the alleged conspiracy
nor pinpointed any agreement with such a physician that might
violate Section 1. Because this theory lacks evidentiary support,
it was not a barrier to the entry of summary judgment.
The plaintiffs attempt to confess and avoid. They blame
the dearth of evidence on a denial of discovery and complain that
summary judgment was premature because they had insufficient
opportunity to flesh out these alternative theories and pursue
supporting evidence through discovery. A careful perscrutation of
the record belies this plaint. The district court's discovery
order embraced any and all antitrust theories including, by
definition, the embedded formulations that the plaintiffs belatedly
found lurking in the penumbra of the amended complaint. We explain
briefly.
Blue Cross's motion for brevis disposition broadly
requested the entry of summary judgment on the "[p]laintiffs'
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claims under Section 1 of the Sherman Act and Article 2 of Puerto
Rico's antitrust statute." Blue Cross did not limit this prayer to
any particular antitrust theory, but, rather, sought to scotch the
antitrust claims as a whole. The district court's ensuing order
matched the scope of Blue Cross's motion; it permitted discovery,
without limitation, as "to the issues raised in [Blue Cross's]
motion for summary judgment on the antitrust claims."
Consequently, to the extent that the amended complaint raised
alternative theories of antitrust liability, the plaintiffs had
adequate opportunity to discover facts in support of them. They
cannot now complain that the lack of evidence in the record should
be excused. See Maldonado-Denis v. Castillo-Rodriguez, 23 F.3d
576, 585 (1st Cir. 1994).
We add one final note. Had the plaintiffs genuinely
believed that they had been unfairly limited in the availability of
discovery, they had an obligation to bring the matter to the
district court's attention by means of a timely motion under Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56(f). See Mass. Sch. of Law at Andover, Inc. v. Am.
Bar Ass'n, 142 F.3d 26, 44-45 n.15 (1st Cir. 1998); Resolution
Trust Corp. v. N. Bridge Assocs., Inc., 22 F.3d 1198, 1203 (1st
Cir. 1994). In the absence of such a motion — and none was filed
here — a subsequent complaint of denied discovery will ordinarily
be rejected. See, e.g., Corrada Betances v. Sea-Land Serv., Inc.,
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248 F.3d 40, 44 (1st Cir. 2001); Mass. Sch. of Law, 142 F.3d at 44.
This case falls well within that general proscription.
D. The Lanham Act Claim.
In pertinent part, Section 43 of the Lanham Act prohibits
the use of any communication "in commercial advertising or
promotion [that] misrepresents the nature, characteristics,
qualities, or geographic origin of . . . goods, services, or
commercial activities." 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1)(B). The plaintiffs
assert in their amended complaint that Blue Cross violated this
statute when it "falsely disparaged the health care services
provided by podiatrists and actively encouraged patients to seek
services from medical doctors instead." Beyond this statement, the
plaintiffs make only the skimpy allegations that "patients have
falsely been told by [Blue Cross] that [it] cannot reimburse them
for podiatrist services because podiatrists are not 'real'
doctors," and that these misrepresentations were "disseminated
widely to patients who needed foot care." The amended complaint
contained no allegation or information regarding the means through
which these misrepresentations were communicated. Blue Cross moved
under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) to dismiss this claim, and the
district court obliged.
We afford plenary review to a district court's order of
dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be
granted. Arruda v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 310 F.3d 13, 18 (1st Cir.
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2002). In conducting that review, we must assume the truth of all
well-pleaded facts contained in the operative pleading (here, the
plaintiffs' amended complaint). Id. If "the factual averments do
not justify recovery on some theory adumbrated in the complaint,
then — and only then — can we affirm a dismissal for failure to
state an actionable claim." Rogan v. Menino, 175 F.3d 75, 77 (1st
Cir. 1999).
Despite this generous standard, we repeatedly have
cautioned that "Rule 12(b)(6) is not entirely a toothless tiger. .
. . The threshold for stating a claim may be low, but it is real."
Dartmouth Rev. v. Dartmouth Coll., 889 F.2d 13, 16 (1st Cir. 1989)
(internal citation omitted). The complaint must therefore set
forth "factual allegations, either direct or inferential,
respecting each material element necessary to sustain recovery
under some actionable legal theory." Gooley v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
851 F.2d 513, 515 (1st Cir. 1988); see also DM Research, Inc. v.
Coll. of Am. Pathologists, 170 F.3d 53, 55 (1st Cir. 1999)
(explaining that the complaint must "allege a factual predicate
concrete enough to warrant further proceedings").
Against this backdrop, we turn to the plaintiffs' Lanham
Act claim. The relevant statutory language prohibits
misrepresentations only in "commercial advertising or promotion."
This is a crucial limitation — and one that the district court
thought dispositive here. Accordingly, we must plot the boundaries
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of that phrase and then determine whether the plaintiffs'
allegations fall within those boundaries.
The courts have developed a four-part test to ascertain
which representations fall into the category of "commercial
advertising or promotion" for purposes of Section 43(a)(1)(B). The
test requires that a representation must (a) constitute commercial
speech (b) made with the intent of influencing potential customers
to purchase the speaker's goods or services (c) by a speaker who is
a competitor of the plaintiff in some line of trade or commerce and
(d) disseminated to the consuming public in such a way as to
constitute "advertising" or "promotion." See Proctor & Gamble Co.
v. Haugen, 222 F.3d 1262, 1273-74 (10th Cir. 2000); Coastal
Abstract Serv., Inc. v. First Am. Title Ins. Co., 173 F.3d 725, 735
(9th Cir. 1999); Seven-Up Co. v. Coca-Cola Co., 86 F.3d 1379, 1384
(5th Cir. 1996); Gordon & Breach Sci. Publishers v. Am. Inst. of
Physics, 859 F. Supp. 1521, 1536 (S.D.N.Y. 1994).3
While the Lanham Act's commercial disparagement provision
covers more than classic advertising campaigns, it is nonetheless
3
Although this test bears the imprimatur of several respected
courts, the Seventh Circuit has expressed "serious doubts about the
wisdom of displacing the statutory text in favor of a judicial
rewrite with no roots in the language Congress enacted . . . for
when the Lanham Act was adopted there were no constitutional limits
on the regulation of commercial speech." First Health Group Corp.
v. BCE Emergis Corp., 269 F.3d 800, 803 (7th Cir. 2001). Since the
phrase "commercial advertising or promotion" appears in the text of
the statute itself and all the courts agree on its approximate
scope, we need not resolve that tension here.
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aimed at specific forms of communication. See, e.g., First Health
Group Corp. v. BCE Emergis Corp., 269 F.3d 800, 803-04 (7th Cir.
2001); Seven-Up, 86 F.3d at 1384; Gordon & Breach, 859 F. Supp. at
1534-35. To constitute advertising or promotion, commercial speech
must at a bare minimum target a class or category of purchasers or
potential purchasers, not merely particular individuals. See
Seven-Up, 86 F.3d at 1384-86 (collecting cases); see also First
Health, 269 F.3d at 803 ("Advertising is a form of promotion to
anonymous recipients, as distinguished from face-to-face
communication."); 4 J. Thomas McCarthy, McCarthy on Trademarks and
Unfair Competition § 27:102 (4th ed. 2003) ("A cause of action for
commercial disparagement requires that the disparaging statement
about another's product be published . . . ."). Thus, to pass the
pleading threshold in a Lanham Act § 43(a)(1)(B) case, a plaintiff
at the very least must identify some medium or means through which
the defendant disseminated information to a particular class of
consumers. See Ultra-Temp Corp. v. Advanced Vacuum Sys., Inc., 27
F. Supp. 2d. 86, 91 (D. Mass. 1998); see also 4 McCarthy, supra, §
27:24 (noting that identifying a false or misleading statement that
was made in "commercial advertising or promotion" is a pleading
requirement for a product disparagement claim). The plaintiffs'
allegations here lack this critical component; they do not
implicate the use of any particular advertising or promotional
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medium. This omission opened the Lanham Act count to dismissal
under Rule 12(b)(6). See Gooley, 851 F.2d at 515.
The plaintiffs, in their appellate brief, belatedly
endeavor to plug this hole. They claim for the first time that
"[w]hen prospective patients contact [Blue Cross] inquiring about
foot care," Blue Cross representatives habitually "disparag[e]
podiatrists as not being 'real doctors.'" We need not decide
whether this method of responsive communication would fall under
the rubric of "commercial advertising or promotion" within the
meaning of the Lanham Act or whether such a statement, if
articulated in the amended complaint, would have satisfied the
pleading requirements. It is elementary that a plaintiff cannot
constructively amend his complaint with an allegation made for the
first time in an appellate brief. Royal Bus. Group, Inc. v.
Realist, Inc., 933 F.2d 1056, 1066 (1st Cir. 1991); Dartmouth Rev.,
889 F.2d at 22. Thus, the argument has been waived. McCoy v.
Mass. Inst. of Tech., 950 F.2d 13, 22 (1st Cir. 1991) ("It is
hornbook law that theories not raised squarely in the district
court cannot be surfaced for the first time on appeal."); Clauson
v. Smith, 823 F.2d 660, 666 (1st Cir. 1987) (similar; collecting
cases).
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Suffice it to say that close
scrutiny of the record reveals that the district court
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appropriately granted the defendants' dispositive motions on both
the antitrust and commercial disparagement claims. The plaintiffs
may have a remedy in the marketplace, the Puerto Rico legislature,
or the local courts, but for aught that appears they do not have
one in the domain of the federal judiciary.
Affirmed.
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