Federal Circuits, 9th Cir. (June 18, 1991)
Docket number: 89-16405
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U.S. Supreme Court - Group Life & Health Ins. Co. v. Royal Drug Co., 440 U.S. 205 (1979)
U.S. Supreme Court - St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Barry, 438 U.S. 531 (1978)
U.S. Supreme Court - Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341 (1943)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Cir. - Dee-K Enter v. Heveafil, 299 F.3d 281 (4th Cir. 2002)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Cir. - GERLING V GLOBAL (9th Cir. 2001)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Cir. - Arleen Freeman, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; James Alexander, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants, and Edward Y. Urata, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated, Plaintiff, v. San Diego Association of Realtors; North San Diego County Association of Realtors; Pacific Southwest Association of Realtors, Inc.; East San Diego County Association of Realtors; Coronado Association of Realtors; Sandicor, Inc.; Michael Spilger; Greg Britton; Joel Forrel; Gwen Hovland; Aileen Oya; Marty Conrad; Lauren Reiser; Anita Alkire; Phyllis Gritts; Chris H. Lewis; Lou Ann Williams; Cory Shepard; Sara Brown; Joyce v. Amick; Jerry Scantlin; Walter Baczkowski; Mark Marchand; Stephen Games; California Association of Realtors, Defendants-Appellees. Arleen Freeman, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; James Alexander, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; Edward Y. Urata, Individually And..., 322 F.3d 1133 (9th Cir. 2003) Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; James Alexander, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants, and Edward Y. Urata, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated, Plaintiff, v. San Diego Association of Realtors; North San Diego County Association of Realtors; Pacific Southwest Association of Realtors, Inc.; East San Diego County Association of Realtors; Coronado Association of Realtors; Sandicor, Inc.; Michael Spilger; Greg Britton; Joel Forrel; Gwen Hovland; Aileen Oya; Marty Conrad; Lauren Reiser; Anita Alkire; Phyllis Gritts; Chris H. Lewis; Lou Ann Williams; Cory Shepard; Sara Brown; Joyce v. Amick; Jerry Scantlin; Walter Baczkowski; Mark Marchand; Stephen Games; California Association of Realtors, Defendants-Appellees. Arleen Freeman, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; James Alexander, Individually and on Behalf of all Others Similarly Situated; Edward Y. Urata, Individually And...
Thomas Greene, Deputy Atty. Gen., San Francisco, Cal., H. Ladie Montague, Philadelphia, Pa., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Laurel Price, Deputy Atty. Gen., Trenton, N.J., for State plaintiffs-appellants.Bartlett H. McGuire, Davis, Polk & Wardwell, Washington, D.C., John Harkins, Philadelphia, Pa., Martin Evans, New York City, for defendants-appellees.Edwin A. Heafey, Jr., Raoul D. Kennedy and Richard de Saint Phalle of Crosby, Heafey, Roach & May, Oakland, Cal., defendants-appellees' liaison counsel.Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.Before BEEZER and NOONAN, Circuit Judges, and SINGLETON,* District Judge.NOONAN, Circuit Judge:Nineteen states and numerous private parties brought antitrust suits against the defendants named above. These suits were consolidated in the district court and were ultimately dismissed. The plaintiffs appeal. We reverse the district court and remand.FACTUAL BACKGROUNDThe undisputed facts are set out by the district court in In re Insurance Antitrust Litigation, 723 F.Supp. 464, 468-70 (N.D.Cal.1989). We summarize:Commercial general liability insurance (CGL) protects the insured against the risk of liability to third parties for bodily injury or property damage. It is purchased by businesses, nonprofit entities, and governmental units. Defendants Hartford Fire Insurance Company (Hartford), Allstate Insurance Company (Allstate), Aetna Casualty and Surety Company (Aetna), and CIGNA Corporation (CIGNA) are sellers of CGL.In distinction from these primary insurers, there are reinsurers to whom the primary insurers turn to share their risk. The terms and availability of reinsurance directly affect the terms and availability of primary insurance. In turn, retrocessional insurance--insurance for reinsurers--has an impact on the terms of reinsurance and primary insurance. The defendant reinsurers in this case are domestic--e.g., General Reinsurance Corporation (General Re)--and also foreign. The foreign defendant companies include one Swiss corporation, Winterthur Swiss Insurance Company (Winterthur); and six "London Company Market" corporations, all of them subsidiaries of American corporations: Terra Nova Insurance Co., Ltd. (Terra Nova); Unionamerica Insurance Co., Ltd. (Unionamerica); Continental Reinsurance Co., (U.K.) Ltd. (Continental Re); Excess Insurance Group, Ltd. (Excess); Kemper Reinsurance London, Ltd. (Kemper Re); and CNA Re (U.K.) Ltd.Reinsurance is arranged by specialized brokers and underwriters. Much reinsurance is done by syndicates doing business through Lloyd's of London. A variety of defendants here are underwriters for these reinsurance syndicates-- e.g., Merrett Underwriting Agencies Management, Ltd. (Merrett) and Three Quays Underwriting Management Ltd. (Three Quays). Thomas A. Greene and Co., Inc. (Greene) is an American reinsurance broker, a defendant here. Ballantyne, McKean and Sullivan, Ltd. (Ballantyne) and R.K. Carvill & Co., Ltd., (Carvill) are London reinsurance brokers, defendants here. There are also individual defendants associated with reinsurance--e.g., Peter North Miller, the chairman of the Council of Lloyd's, its governing body; and Robin A.G. Jackson, chief underwriter for Merrett.Two insurance associations are also defendants. One is Reinsurance Association of America (RAA), which principally engages in lobbying. The other is the Insurance Service Office (ISO). ISO has a key role in the regulation of insurance by the several states. Formed in 1971 by the merger of eleven insurance rating bureaus, ISO is an association of over fourteen hundred property and casualty insurers. It develops standard forms of policies. It collects statistical data and estimates risks relevant to the forms. In those states where regulators formally approve the forms, ISO presents the forms for approval.In 1984, Hartford expressed its dissatisfaction with the standard ISO form for CGL insurance. In particular, Hartford was displeased with the way the form insured against "occurrences" of liability during the life of the policy. Such insurance had "a long tail," i.e., years after the policy had expired, a claim might be made upon it for an occurrence during the life of the policy. Hartford wanted a "claims made" form to replace the "occurrences" form. Under a "claims made" form only claims made during the life of the policy would be paid. Hartford also objected to coverage of liability for accidental pollution in the standard CGL form.Led by Hartford, the defendant primary insurers exerted concerted pressure on ISO to get it to withdraw its form for CGL insurance. In June 1984 Hartford persuaded major American reinsurers to agree to boycott the ISO form. Hartford, Aetna, Allstate and CIGNA then joined forces to persuade key underwriters at Lloyd's to agree to boycott the form. The defendants used reinsurance brokers to convey their message. Leading underwriters in London responded to the American request by threatening a boycott of insurance written on the form. ISO began to retreat. In September 1984 ISO agreed to the unprecedented presence of domestic and foreign reinsurers at its executive committee meeting of September 20, 1984. Four reinsurance underwriters from Lloyd's conveyed their insistence on Hartford's terms. Change the form or get no reinsurance was their theme. ISO responded by eliminating accidental pollution coverage and by approving a claims made form with a date after which claims could not be filed. ISO also continued to offer a CGL occurrence form.The reinsurance defendants continued to press for elimination of the occurrence form. They announced, publicly and privately, that there would be no reinsurance for primary insurers writing on the occurrence form, and they refused to renew long-standing reinsurance treaties with primary insurers in the United States unless they agreed to abandon the occurrence form. As a result of the reinsurers' actions, primary insurers were precludedfrom selling long tail insurance and also from selling accidental pollution insurance. Whether these varieties of insurance disappeared entirely is not clear; what is alleged is that their availability was substantially diminished. In most states where a regulatory state agency approved insurance forms, ISO obtained approval of its new CGL form. Thereafter, ISO withdrew its data collection and risk-estimation support for the pre-1984 form.In late 1985 Hartford and Aetna took the lead in urging ISO to develop standard forms for two other types of CGL insurance: umbrella and excess. With the cooperation of Merrett, Three Quays and Allstate, these standard forms were prepared and approved by ISO.London reinsurers including Unionamerica, Terra Nova, Excess, Kemper Re and Continental Re, plus the Lloyd's underwriters Merrett and Edwards and Payne agreed to boycott reinsurance and insurance policies for United States property seepage and pollution exposures. The agreement is memorialized in the "Non Marine London Market Agreement 1987," signed by over forty retrocessional reinsurers at Lloyd's and the London Company Market. The parties to the agreement agreed to accept retrocessional reinsurance only from reinsurers who signed a letter of intent stating the following:We hereby agree that we will use our best endeavours to ensure that all U.S.A. and Canadian exposed insurance/reinsurance business attaching on or after 1st January 1987 will only be written where the original business includes a seepage and pollution exclusion clause wherever legal and applicable.The effect of this agreement was to deny insurance consumers in the United States property coverage for seepage and pollution.The MarketsAs the plaintiffs have presented their case, the markets affected by the defendants' conduct are (1) the market in the United States for CGL insurance, (2) the market in the United States for excess and umbrella CGL insurance, (3) the market in the United States for property insurance, (4) the market in the United States and the United Kingdom for reinsurance, and (5) the market in the United Kingdom for retrocessional insurance.The SuitsThe complaint filed by California is representative of the claims of Alabama, Arizona, California, Massachusetts, New York, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. In its first claim, California alleges that the American reinsurer defendants; the four primary insurer defendants; Winterthur; and Greene conspired in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec . 1, to restrict the terms on which reinsurance would be offered for CGL risks and to refuse to provide reinsurance coverage for CGL risks unless ISO agreed to amend its 1984 CGL forms. In its second claim, California alleges that named Lloyd's underwriters; the four primary insurer defendants; and the brokers Greene and Carvill conspired to the same effect. In the third claim, California alleges that the Lloyd's underwriters; the four primary insurers; the American reinsurers; Winterthur; and Greene and Carvill conspired to the same effect.In its fourth claim, California includes as defendants RAA and ISO together with the primary insurers; the Lloyd's underwriters; the American reinsurers; Winterthur; and Greene and Carvill. California charges them with conspiracy to eliminate pollution coverage and retroactive coverage from the 1984 claims-made form of ISO.California's fifth claim is against five named Lloyd's underwriters; against Peter Miller and Robin A.G. Jackson; and against the London reinsurance broker Ballantyne, charging them with violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act by conspiracy to restrict the terms on which reinsurance would be provided for CGL risks; to refuse to reinsure CGL risks written on an occurrence form; and to eliminate reinsurance on long-tail risk covered by occurrence policies.The sixth claim for relief names the Lloyd's underwriters; London company reinsurers, Unionamerica, Terra Nova, and CNA Re; and London reinsurance broker Ballantyne as conspirators to violate the Sherman Act by restricting the terms on which CGL reinsurance would be provided and by limiting the availability in the United States of pollution coverage.In the seventh claim California charges ISO; Aetna, Allstate and Hartford; and the underwriters Merrett and Three Quays with violating the Sherman Act by agreeing to, and promulgating, model forms for umbrella and excess insurance.The eighth claim of California is that the six named London Company reinsurers plus Merrett conspired to restrict the terms on which property insurance and reinsurance coverage would be provided for North American risks.The ninth to eleventh claims of California are for violations of state law--of, respectively, the Cartwright Act, California Business and Professional Code, Sec. 16720 et seq.; the Unfair Trade Practices Act, California Insurance Code, Sec. 790 et seq.; and the Unfair Competition Act, California Business and Professions Code Sec. 17200 et seq. No defendants are named in these claims but it is asserted that all of the conspiracies federally charged violated the three state laws invoked here.The complaint of Connecticut is representative of complaints filed after the California complaint by Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Washington. There is substantial overlap between the California and Connecticut complaints. Connecticut, however, in its first claim charges all of the defendants with violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act "by a conspiracy with the purpose and with the effect of shrinking the scope of CGL property/casualty insurance and reinsurance and retrocessional reinsurance in connection therewith."PROCEEDINGSIn March 1988 eight plaintiff states filed California-style complaints. In June 1988 ten additional states filed Connecticut-style complaints. Louisiana later joined this group, and Minnesota amended its complaint to conform to the Connecticut style. Various private plaintiffs joined in; all but two--from Illinois and Florida--were from states that were already plaintiffs.The defendants filed five motions asking the district court to dismiss the suits for failure to state a cause of action or, in the alternative, to grant summary judgment. On October 10, 1989 the district court gave judgment for the defendants for reasons that will be taken up infra. Doing so, the district court treated its action as dismissal for failure to state a cause of action or, in the alternative, as summary judgment for the defendants. The district court accepted all the facts alleged by the plaintiffs and stated that there were "no factual disputes material to this ruling." In re Insurance Antitrust Litigation, 723 F.Supp. at 491.Thereafter the plaintiffs moved to amend, and the district court denied the motion, observing: "The plain fact is that plaintiffs seek to recover on a theory that, as heretofore explained at length, will not stand under the law." Id. at 490.The plaintiffs appeal.ANALYSISStandingThe domestic and foreign reinsurers challenged the plaintiffs' standing to bring an antitrust suit against them. The district court ruled in the plaintiffs' favor. In re Insurance Antitrust Litigation, 723 F.Supp. at 482-83. The foreign reinsurer defendants press their position on this appeal.Standing in the sense challenged depends on whether Congress in the Sherman Act intended to protect the kind of interest asserted by the plaintiffs. R.C. Dick Geothermal Corp. v. Thermogenics, Inc., 890 F.2d 139, 146 (9th Cir.1989). To answer this question we look at the five factors set out in Associated General Contractors of California, Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters, 459 U.S. 519, 537-45, 103 S.Ct. 897, 908-12, 74 L.Ed.2d 723 (1983).First: The Specific Intent of the Alleged Conspirators. The reinsurer defendants are alleged to have intended to restrict the kinds of insurance available to the plaintiffs. This factor favors standing.Second: The Directness of the Injury. "Directness" in the antitrust context means "close in the chain of causation." R.C. Dick, 890 F.2d at 147. Accepting as we must the plaintiffs' allegations as true, there is a close connection between the conduct of the reinsurer defendants, domestic and foreign, and the damages suffered by the plaintiffs. As the district court found, "the direct effect" of the reinsurers' action was "to restrain the availability of desired coverages in the markets in which plaintiffs purchase insurance." In re Insurance Antitrust Litigation, 723 F.Supp. at 483. That the action of the reinsurers took effect through the primary insurers does not lessen the directness of these consequences which followed so closely upon the challenged conduct. The injury alleged was direct. This factor favors standing.Third: The Character of the Damages. According to their claims, plaintiffs suffered by having to pay more for the insurance they wanted. Although the proof may be complex, it would appear that they could prove how much extra they had to pay. In the claims in which the primary insurers are charged together with the reinsurers, all of the defendants would be jointly and severally liable if the charges are true. In the claims in which the reinsurers alone are defendants, there will be a problem of allocating the damages caused by the reinsurers as distinct from the damages caused by the primary insurers, and there is a danger of duplicative recovery. To the extent of this problem and this damage, the character of the damages is against standing; but the net balance as to damages is in favor of standing.Fourth: The Existence of Other, More Appropriate Plaintiffs. The primary insurers who were denied reinsurance could have brought suit. The theoretical possibility that such entities could have sued must be discounted by the power the allegations attribute to the London reinsurers. The 1400 members of ISO could not withstand this power. As they caved in to it, they are unlikely to desire to challenge it in court. Consumers of insurance are not subject to this restraint. Realistically, no more appropriate class of plaintiffs exists.Fifth: The Nature of the Plaintiffs' Claimed Injury. The fifth factor is "of tremendous significance." R.C. Dick, 890 F.2d at 148, quoting Bhan v. NME Hospitals, Inc., 772 F.2d 1467, 1470 n. 3 (9th Cir.1985). For example, a plaintiff who is "neither a competitor nor a consumer" in the relevant market does not suffer "antitrust injury." R.C. Dick at 148.In contrast, plaintiffs here were consumers of CGL insurance. As consumers, they participated in the market said to have been restrained. The antitrust laws are intended to preserve competition. They are intended to preserve competition for the benefit of consumers in the market in which competition occurs. When competition is choked off, it is the consumers who suffer. The plaintiffs here as consumers have alleged antitrust injury.The Balance. Almost all of the Associated General Contractors factors point to the presence of standing against all of the defendants. By not challenging the plaintiffs' standing on this appeal, the defendant primary insurers and the domestic reinsurers concede the presence of the factors that establish standing. The foreign reinsurers have no characteristics that distinguish them from the domestic reinsurers. As the district court determined, the plaintiffs have standing to maintain this antitrust suit against all defendants.Standing as Parens PatriaeThat a state as parens patriae may sue to redress a violation of the antitrust laws is well-established. Georgia v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 324 U.S. 439, 450-51, 65 S.Ct. 716, 722-23, 89 L.Ed. 1051 (1945) (conspiracy in violation of antitrust laws is a wrong "of grave public concern in which Georgia has an interest apart from that of particular individuals who may be affected.") There must, of course, be antitrust injury for an injunction to be granted. Cargill, Inc. v. Monfort of Colorado, Inc., 479 U.S. 104, 109-16, 107 S.Ct. 484, 488-92, 93 L.Ed.2d 427 (1986). Each state here asserts its "quasi-sovereign interest in the health and well-being--both physical and economic--of its residents in general." Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. v. Puerto Rico, 458 U.S. 592, 607, 102 S.Ct. 3260, 3269, 73 L.Ed.2d 995 (1982). That interest makes each state "more than a nominal party." Id. The state's interest in preventing harm to its citizens by antitrust violations is, indeed, a prime instance of the interest that the parens patriae can vindicate by obtaining damages and/or an injunction. Id. at 605, 102 S.Ct. at 3268.The McCarran-Ferguson Act DefenseThe district court dismissed the claims of the plaintiffs because of the McCarran-Ferguson Act immunity of the defendants. We look at the plaintiffs' allegations, accepting them as the district court did as true, to see if McCarran immunity is present.The McCarran-Ferguson Act provides that no act of Congress "shall be construed to invalidate" any state law enacted "for the purpose of regulating the business of insurance." 15 U.S.C. Sec . 1012(b) (1988). Two relevant exceptions are added: The Sherman Act "shall be applicable to the business of insurance to the extent that such business is not regulated by State law." Id. Moreover, "Nothing contained in this chapter shall render the said Sherman Act inapplicable to any agreement to boycott, coerce, or intimidate, or act of boycott, coercion, or intimidation." Id. Sec. 1013(b).For the immunity to apply, therefore, the defendants must be in the business of insurance; that business must be regulated by state law; and the defendants must not have agreed to boycott, coerce, or intimidate or performed an act of boycott, coercion or intimidation.The Business of InsuranceThe district court correctly found that the first condition was met: the defendants are in the business of insurance. Reinsurance and retrocessional insurance are as much the business of insurance as the offering of primary insurance. In re Insurance Antitrust Litigation, 723 F.Supp. at 473. Although the plaintiffs made an issue of this question in the district court, they do not seriously argue it on this appeal.State RegulationDo the states regulate the conduct complained of here? The district court observed that the complaints filed by the states alleged violation of state law as well as violation of the Sherman Act. The district court concluded that these allegations were "self-defeating." Id. at 475. The states had wounded their case mortally by asserting that the defendants were liable to state regulation.By the same token, it could be observed, the defendants by their McCarran-Ferguson Act defense conceded that their business was subject to regulation by the states, and the foreign defendants thereby undermined their claim that comity barred their being subject to American regulation. The district court recognized that the position of the foreign defendants was inconsistent but did not feel bound to resolve the inconsistency, treating the defendants' pleas as alternatives: they won either because they were subject to state regulation or, because of comity, they were subject to no American regulation. Id. at 479.What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. If defendants are to be read as offering inconsistent alternatives, so are the plaintiffs to be read. Pleading of one alternative does not destroy the foundation of the other alternative. Neither side is trapped by its pleadings.More fundamentally, established law blocks regulation by one state of the United States of the insurance business outside the borders of that state. A state's regulation of insurance does not have extraterritorial effect within the United States. See FTC v. Travelers Health Ass'n, 362 U.S. 293, 298-99, 302, 80 S.Ct. 717, 720-21, 722, 4 L.Ed.2d 724 (1960). The court commented on the legislative history of the McCarran-Ferguson Act and concluded from H.R.Rep. 143, 79 Cong. 1st Sess. 3, which cited Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U.S. 578, 17 S.Ct. 427, 41 L.Ed. 832; St. Louis Cotton Compress Co. v. Arkansas, 260 U.S. 346, 43 S.Ct. 125, 67 L.Ed. 297; and Connecticut General Insurance Co. v. Johnson, 303 U.S. 77, 58 S.Ct. 436, 82 L.Ed. 673 that a state does not have power to regulate in any way contracts of insurance or reinsurance entered into outside its jurisdiction even though the risks covered were risks within the state. Id. 362 U.S. at 300-01, 80 S.Ct. at 721-22. The Court summed up the legislative history: "There was no indication of any thought that a State could regulate activities carried on beyond its own borders." Id. at 300, 80 S.Ct. at 721.A fortiori, regulation by the fifty states of foreign reinsurers is beyond the jurisdiction of the states. J. Atwood & K. Brewster, Antitrust and American Business Abroad (2d ed. 1981) 1, 78. All of the arguments eloquently put by the London defendants in their objection to the application of the Sherman Act to their business apply fifty times over to the regulation of it by the individual states. State insurance schemes "do not, and could not, purport to regulate the bulk of international insurance transactions." Id. Consequently, McCarran-Ferguson Act immunity does not attach to the foreign defendants. By the same token, the claims by the states against the foreign defendants alone under state insurance laws (referencing the fifth, sixth, and eighth California claims) must be dismissed as seeking to exercise extraterritorial jurisdiction.A different question is presented by the primary insurers, the American reinsurers, and the American insurance brokers, all of whom are subject to regulation by the states and therefore prima facie immune. The question is whether the action of these domestic defendants in combination with the foreign defendants is subject to state regulation. The states argue that it is not. They invoke the principle that "an exempt entity forfeits antitrust exemption by acting in concert with nonexempt parties." Group Life & Health Ins. Co. v. Royal Drug Co., 440 U.S. 205, 231, 99 S.Ct. 1067, 1083, 59 L.Ed.2d 261 (1979). Membership of an exempt entity in a conspiracy with nonexempt entities makes the exempt entity liable. Beltz Travel Service, Inc. v. International Air Transport Assoc., 620 F.2d 1360, 1366-67 (9th Cir.1980). The domestic defendants offer no rebuttal to these authorities. We conclude that the domestic defendants' immunity was lost when they conspired with the foreign defendants.BoycottsA second, independent ground exists why the McCarran-Ferguson Act defense does not work for any of the defendants. The Sherman Act applies to persons or companies in the insurance business if they agreed to a boycott or engaged in acts of boycott or coercion. The allegations of the plaintiffs, here accepted as true, charge agreements by the defendants to boycott nonconforming insurers and acts of boycott and coercion. No immunity for such agreements and acts exists.The defendants' position is that they could confer and agree on the terms on which insurance would be offered; the immunity in so doing is incontestable. But they are charged with much more: with agreeing to refuse reinsurance for CGL risks unless ISO amended its 1984 CGL form; with coercing ISO and ISO members to adopt the terms the defendants wanted; with coercing primary insurers to use the claims-made form; with agreeing to exclude from all casualty and property treaty reinsurance written in London all pollution coverage for American risks. The facts underlying these allegations are asserted in some detail, including, the actions of Hartford, CIGNA, Aetna, and Allstate in 1984 in bringing pressure on the ISO staff and other ISO members; the meeting of March 2, 1984 between representatives of Hartford and representatives of General Re when they agreed to coerce ISO to accept their demand; the successful effort of General Re with RAA so that on March 26, 1984, RAA created a committee, consisting of five of the defendant domestic reinsurers, to force revision of the ISO forms of CGL insurance; the agreement of this committee on June 15, 1984 to boycott the 1984 forms, followed by a letter from RAA to ISO on June 19, 1984, stating that the members of RAA would not provide reinsurance for coverages written on the 1984 forms; the enlistment of Thomas Greene to carry this message to ISO, as he did in a speech to the ISO directors on June 21, 1984.Hartford, Aetna, CIGNA, and Allstate--all according to allegations that here are accepted as the truth--also took the initiative to encourage a boycott of the 1984 ISO forms by the lead underwriters of North American casualty reinsurance at Lloyd's of London and used Thomas Greene and Nick Graham of Carvill to carry the message to the London reinsurance market. As a result of these efforts, the lead underwriters, named as defendants here, met representatives of ISO at the Garrick Club in London on July 4, 1984 and indicated their resolve to eliminate the occurrence form. On September 19, 1984, at a dinner at the Board Room, a private club in New York City, a combination of representatives of the defendant domestic reinsurers and foreign underwriters communicated to ISO members their agreed demands for change. The following day ISO largely capitulated. Agreements to boycott and acts of implementation of the agreements are, in short, explicitly set forth in the complaints.In the classic case on boycotts in the context of the McCarran-Ferguson Act, St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Barry, 438 U.S. 531, 98 S.Ct. 2923, 57 L.Ed.2d 932 (1978), four insurance companies entered into an agreement according to whose terms three of the companies would not sell insurance to doctors in order to force them to accept "new ground rules of coverage set by the fourth." Id. at 533, 98 S.Ct. at 2926. The Court found "an organized boycott" to exist, stating: "The enlistment of third parties in an agreement not to trade, as a means of compelling capitulation by the boycotted group, long has been viewed as conduct supporting a finding of unlawful boycott." Id. at 544-45, 98 S.Ct. at 2931. That is exactly what Hartford and the other defendant prime insurers did here, always accepting the plaintiffs' allegations as true: they enlisted the reinsurers to compel capitulation by ISO and the insurers who had refused to go along with the Hartford demands. The London reinsurers did similarly in denying retrocessional coverage on policies covering pollution risks.Congress, the Court said in St. Paul, intended to guard against "the danger that insurance companies might take advantage of purely permissive state legislation to establish monopolies and enter into restrictive agreements falling outside the realm of state-supervised cooperative action." Id. at 547, 98 S.Ct. at 2933. The states allege that Hartford and its allies engaged in precisely such conduct and that the reinsurers did the same among themselves.The Court in St. Paul gave prominence to the explanation of the McCarran-Ferguson Act by Senator O'Mahoney, who said the vice in the insurance industry was "a system of private government which had been built up by a small group of insurance companies, which companies undertook by their agreements and understandings to invade the field of Congress to regulate commerce." Id. at 548, 98 S.Ct. at 2933. That is precisely what has happened in this case, according to the plaintiffs: the defendants have gone beyond joint action to their own regulation of the terms on which CGL and property insurance will be offered.The district court, of course, was as familiar with St. Paul as this court is, but placed an emphasis that we do not on the Court's statement that the boycotting insurers there would not deal with the doctors "on any terms." The district court supplied italics for this phrase which is unemphasized in the Court's opinion. Compare In re Insurance Antitrust Litigation, 723 F.Supp. at 476, with St. Paul, 438 U.S. at 552, 98 S.Ct. at 2935. The issue before the Court was whether "boycott" in the McCarran-Ferguson Act meant boycotts directed against policyholders as well as boycotts directed at competitors. Id. at 552, 98 S.Ct. at 2935. The Court held the term to include both kinds of boycott. The description of the boycott at issue was not made as a definition excluding from the definition refusals to deal except on the terms demanded. The evil of a boycott is not its absolute character but the use of the economic power of a third party to force the boycott victim to agree to the boycott beneficiary's terms. So the three malpractice insurers in St. Paul used their economic power to force doctors to accept St. Paul's terms; so here, the defendant reinsurers and London underwriters used their economic power, their refusal to reinsure, to force ISO and its recalcitrant members to accept the terms Hartford and its allies wanted. They, if plaintiffs are correct in their allegations, engaged in a boycott.The district court limited the term "boycott" in a second way, quoting Feinstein v. Nettleship Co., 714 F.2d 928, 933 (9th Cir.1983), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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