Ranchers’ Claims Against Meat Packers Found Too Remote For Antitrust Standing
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  • Ranchers’ Claims Against Meat Packers Found Too Remote For Antitrust Standing
     

    09/06/2023
    On August 17, 2023, the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota dismissed a complaint brought by “cow-calf” ranchers alleging they had been injured by a conspiracy by  defendant meat packers to artificially depress the price they paid for fed cattle.  In re Cattle and Beef Antitrust Litigation, No. 22-3031 (D. Minn. Aug. 17, 2023).  District Judge John R. Tunheim held that the ranchers, who had not sold directly to defendants, had not adequately alleged “traceability” to show that the allegedly depressed prices they received for cows and calves they sold during the alleged conspiracy period were connected to defendants’ conduct, but left the option open for plaintiffs to refile their complaint.

    The beef industry comprises many different stages along a supply chain, beginning with cow-calf ranchers such as plaintiffs in this case, who breed and sell calves once they are weaned from their mothers, and ending with meat packers, such as defendants here, who buy and slaughter cattle that have reached a certain weight, and then package and sell the meat as beef to retailers and distributors.  Between plaintiffs and defendants are the stockers and the feedlots, which fatten up the young steers and heifers until they have reached the requisite weight to be slaughtered.

    The ranchers’ putative class action complaint was one of many brought by differently situated plaintiffs, including cattle sellers and beef purchasers, in a multidistrict litigation against defendant meat packers.  Plaintiffs alleged that, beginning in 2015, defendants conspired to suppress the price of fed cattle by agreeing with one another to reduce slaughter volume, limit purchases of cattle, coordinate buying practices, import foreign cattle to suppress demand for domestic cattle, and close or idle slaughter plants to limit capacity.  According to the cow-calf rancher plaintiffs here, defendants’ coordinated conduct caused fed cattle prices to collapse, which in turn led to a drop in the price they received for the cows and calves that they reared.  Plaintiffs alleged that defendants engaged in market allocation and price-fixing in violation of the Sherman Act and the Packers and Stockyards Act (“PSA”).  They also brought a number of state law claims alleging violations of state antitrust and consumer protection laws.
     
    Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing that plaintiffs had not adequately pled antitrust standing under Associated General Contractors of California, Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters, 459 U.S. 519 (1983) (“AGC”), and otherwise failed to plead a claim for relief under the state antitrust and consumer protection laws.

    AGC requires courts to consider multiple factors in an antitrust standing analysis, including the causal connection between the alleged antitrust violation and plaintiff’s injury.  The Court here turned to Eighth Circuit precedent interpreting the AGC factors and addressed them each in turn.  See Midwest Commc’ns v. Minn. Twins, Inc., 779 F.2d 444 (8th Cir. 1985).

    Examining these factors, the Court found that the causal connection alleged between  defendants’ alleged conduct (depressing fed cow prices) and the harm to plaintiffs (decreased cow-calf prices) was too attenuated and speculative.  The Court noted that there was “no clear explanation in the Complaint for exactly how Defendants’ scheme proximately caused [plaintiffs’] injury” and that general inferences about the market were insufficient.  It also noted that, unlike the class of indirect purchasers in the same MDL, the cow-calf suppliers had not explained how their decreased profits were traceable to defendants’ conduct.  There are multiple stages in the beef supply chain between plaintiffs and defendants, plaintiffs’ calves are “inherently different” than the full-grown cattle that defendants purchase, and years may pass between the sale of a calf and a defendant’s purchase.  Although the Court found that the remaining factors—defendants’ alleged improper motive, the risk of duplicate or speculative recoveries, or complex damage apportionment—all weighed in plaintiffs’ favor, and whether the injury was of a type that Congress sought to redress with the antitrust laws either weighed in favor of or was neutral with regard to the issue of standing, these factors were not adequate to overcome the lack of direct causal connection between the alleged conduct and plaintiffs’ alleged injury.  Thus, on balance, the AGC factors weighed against a finding of antitrust standing, and the Court dismissed plaintiffs’ Sherman Act and state law antitrust claims.

    In an apparent case of first impression, the Court then considered whether the AGC factors for determining antitrust standing were also applicable to plaintiffs’ Packers and Stockyards Act claim.  Although the AGC analysis had not previously been applied to a PSA claim, the Court explained that it had been extended beyond its original application to the Clayton Act many times, including to laws that reflect federal antitrust statutes, such as the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act of 1970 (“RICO”) and the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvements Act of 1982.  Determining that “at its heart, the PSA is an antitrust law” because its purpose and language mirror federal antitrust laws, the Court also dismissed plaintiffs’ PSA claim under AGC.

    After discussing and dismissing the remaining state law claims, the Court dismissed the complaint in its entirety.  The Court declined to grant plaintiffs leave to amend, but stated that it would reconsider if they filed a letter with the Court describing how they intended to overcome the deficiencies in the complaint.

    This case is a relatively unusual case of applying the ACG factors to upstream indirect sellers allegedly injured by artificially depressed prices, as opposed to the more common fact pattern of downstream indirect purchasers alleging injury by artificially inflated prices.  This case makes clear, however, that in either scenario, courts will continue to focus on whether plaintiffs can establish a direct causal connection between the alleged conduct and their alleged injury.

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