Petitioners, unincorporated townships located in Wisconsin
adjacent to respondent city, filed suit against respondent in
Federal District Court, alleging that petitioners were potential
competitors of respondent in the collection and transportation of
sewage, and that respondent had violated the Sherman Act by
acquiring a monopoly over the provision of sewage treatment
services in the area and by tying the provision of such services to
the provision of sewage collection and transportation services.
Respondent refused to supply sewage treatment services to
petitioners, but supplied the services to individual landowners in
petitioners' areas if a majority of the individuals in the area
voted by referendum election to have their homes annexed by
respondent and to use its sewage collection and transportation
services. The District Court dismissed the complaint, finding,
inter alia, that Wisconsin statutes regulating the
municipal provision of sewage services expressed a clear state
policy to replace competition with regulation. The court concluded
that respondent's allegedly anticompetitive conduct fell within the
"state action" exemption to the federal antitrust laws established
by
Parker v. Brown, 317 U. S. 341. The
Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: Respondent's anticompetitive activities are
protected by the state action exemption to the federal antitrust
laws. Pp.
471 U. S.
38-47.
(a) Before a municipality may claim the protection of the state
action exemption, it must demonstrate that it is engaging in the
challenged activity pursuant to a "clearly articulated" state
policy.
Lafayette v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.,
435 U. S. 389. Pp.
471 U. S.
38-40.
(b) Wisconsin statutes grant authority to cities to construct
and maintain sewage systems, to describe the district to be served,
and to refuse to serve unannexed areas. The statutes are not merely
neutral on state policy but, instead, clearly contemplate that a
city may engage in anticompetitive conduct. To pass the "clear
articulation" test, the legislature need not expressly state in a
statute or the legislative history that it intends for the
delegated action to have anticompetitive effects. The Wisconsin
statutes evidence a clearly articulated state policy to displace
competition with regulation in the area of municipal provision of
sewage services. Pp. 40-44.
Page 471 U. S. 35
(c) The "clear articulation" requirement of the state action
test does not require that respondent show that the State
"compelled" it to act. Although compulsion affirmatively expressed
may be the best evidence of state policy, it is by no means a
prerequisite to a finding that a municipality acted pursuant to
clearly articulated state policy.
Cantor v. Detroit Edison
Co., 428 U. S. 579, and
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, 421 U.
S. 773, distinguished. Pp.
471 U. S.
45-46.
(d) Active state supervision of anticompetitive conduct is not a
prerequisite to exemption from the antitrust laws where the actor
is a municipality, rather than a private party. The requirement of
active state supervision serves essentially the evidentiary
function of ensuring that the actor is engaging in the challenged
conduct pursuant to state policy. Where the actor is a
municipality, rather than a private party, there is little or no
danger that it is involved in a private price-fixing arrangement.
The danger that a municipality will seek to further purely
parochial public interests at the expense of more overriding state
goals is minimal, because of the requirement that the municipality
act pursuant to a clearly articulated state policy. Pp.
471 U. S.
46-47.
700 F.2d 376, affirmed.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 471 U. S. 36
JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the question whether a municipality's
anticompetitive activities are protected by the state action
exemption to the federal antitrust laws established by
Parker
v. Brown, 317 U. S. 341
(1943), when the activities are authorized, but not compelled, by
the State, and the State does not actively supervise the
anticompetitive conduct.
I
Petitioners -- Town of Hallie, Town of Seymour, Town of Union,
and Town of Washington (the Towns are four Wisconsin unincorporated
townships located adjacent to respondent, the City of Eau Claire
(the City)). Town of Hallie is located in Chippewa County, and the
other three towns are located in Eau Claire County. [
Footnote 1] The Towns filed suit against the
City in United States District Court for the Western District of
Wisconsin seeking injunctive relief and alleging that the City
violated the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1
et seq., by
acquiring a monopoly over the provision of sewage treatment
services in Eau Claire and Chippewa Counties, and by tying
Page 471 U. S. 37
the provision of such services to the provision of sewage
collection and transportation services. [
Footnote 2] Under the Federal Water Pollution Control
Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251
et seq., the City had obtained
federal funds to help build a sewage treatment facility within the
Eau Claire Service Area, that included the Towns; the facility is
the only one in the market available to the Towns. The City has
refused to supply sewage treatment services to the Towns. It does
supply the services to individual landowners in areas of the Towns
if a majority of the individuals in the area vote by referendum
election to have their homes annexed by the City,
see
Wis.Stat. §§ 66.024(4), 144.07(1) (1982), and to use the
City's sewage collection and transportation services.
Alleging that they are potential competitors of the City in the
collection and transportation of sewage, the Towns contended in the
District Court that the City used its monopoly over sewage
treatment to gain an unlawful monopoly over the provision of sewage
collection and transportation services, in violation of the Sherman
Act. They also contended that the City's actions constituted an
illegal tying arrangement and an unlawful refusal to deal with the
Towns.
The District Court ruled for the City. It found that Wisconsin's
statutes regulating the municipal provision of sewage service
expressed a clear state policy to replace competition with
regulation. The court also found that the State adequately
supervised the municipality's conduct through the State's
Department of Natural Resources, that was authorized to review
municipal decisions concerning provision of sewage services and
corresponding annexations of land. The court concluded that the
City's allegedly anticompetitive conduct fell within the state
action exemption to the federal antitrust laws, as set forth in
Community
Communications
Page 471 U. S. 38
Co. v. Boulder,
455 U. S. 40
(1982), and
Parker v. Brown, supra. Accordingly, it
dismissed the complaint.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
affirmed. 700 F.2d 376 (1983). It ruled that the Wisconsin statutes
authorized the City to provide sewage services and to refuse to
provide such services to unincorporated areas. The court therefore
assumed that the State had contemplated that anticompetitive
effects might result, and concluded that the City's conduct was
thus taken pursuant to state authorization within the meaning of
Parker v. Brown, supra. The court also concluded that, in
a case such as this, involving "a local government performing a
traditional municipal function," 700 F.2d at 384, active state
supervision was unnecessary for
Parker immunity to apply.
Requiring such supervision as a prerequisite to immunity would also
be unwise in this situation, the court believed, because it would
erode traditional concepts of local autonomy and home rule that
were clearly expressed in the State's statutes.
We granted certiorari, 467 U.S. 1240 (1984), and now affirm.
II
The starting point in any analysis involving the state action
doctrine is the reasoning of
Parker v. Brown. In
Parker, relying on principles of federalism and state
sovereignty, the Court refused to construe the Sherman Act as
applying to the anticompetitive conduct of a State acting through
its legislature. 317 U.S. at
317 U. S.
350-351. Rather, it ruled that the Sherman Act was
intended to prohibit private restraints on trade, and it refused to
infer an intent to "nullify a state's control over its officers and
agents" in activities directed by the legislature.
Id. at
317 U. S.
351.
Municipalities, on the other hand, are not beyond the reach of
the antitrust laws by virtue of their status, because they are not
themselves sovereign.
Lafayette v. Louisiana Power & Light
Co., 435 U. S. 389,
435 U. S. 412
(1978) (opinion of BRENNAN, J.). Rather, to obtain exemption,
municipalities
Page 471 U. S. 39
must demonstrate that their anticompetitive activities were
authorized by the State "pursuant to state policy to displace
competition with regulation or monopoly public service."
Id. at
435 U. S.
413.
The determination that a municipality's activities constitute
state action is not a purely formalistic inquiry; the State may not
validate a municipality's anticompetitive conduct simply by
declaring it to be lawful.
Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. at
317 U. S. 351.
On the other hand, in proving that a state policy to displace
competition exists, the municipality need not "be able to point to
a specific, detailed legislative authorization" in order to assert
a successful
Parker defense to an antitrust suit. 435 U.S.
at
435 U. S. 415.
Rather,
Lafayette suggested, without deciding the issue,
that it would be sufficient to obtain
Parker immunity for
a municipality to show that it acted pursuant to a "clearly
articulated and affirmatively expressed . . . state policy" that
was "actively supervised" by the State. 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 410.
The plurality viewed this approach as desirable because it
"preserv[ed] to the States their freedom . . . to administer
state regulatory policies free of the inhibitions of the federal
antitrust laws without at the same time permitting purely parochial
interests to disrupt the Nation's free-market goals."
Id. at
435 U. S.
415-416.
In
California Retail Liquor Dealers Assn. v. Midcal
Aluminum, Inc., 445 U. S. 97
(1980), a unanimous Court applied the
Lafayette
two-pronged test to a case in which the state action exemption was
claimed by a private party. [
Footnote 3] In
Page 471 U. S. 40
that case, we found no antitrust immunity for California's wine
pricing system. Even though there was a clear legislative policy to
permit resale liquor price maintenance, there was no state
supervision of the anticompetitive activity. Thus, the private wine
producers who set resale prices were not entitled to the state
action exemption. When we again addressed the issue of a
municipality's exemption from the antitrust laws in
Boulder,
supra, we declined to accept
Lafayette's suggestion
that a municipality must show more than that a state policy to
displace competition exists. We held that Colorado's Home Rule
Amendment to its Constitution, conferring on municipal governments
general authority to govern local affairs, did not constitute a
"clear articulation" of a state policy to authorize anticompetitive
conduct with respect to the regulation of cable television in the
locale. Because the city could not meet this requirement of the
state action test, we declined to decide whether governmental
action by a municipality must also be actively supervised by the
State. 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 51-52,
n. 14.
It is therefore clear from our cases that, before a municipality
will be entitled to the protection of the state action exemption
from the antitrust laws, it must demonstrate that it is engaging in
the challenged activity pursuant to a clearly expressed state
policy. We have never fully considered, however, how clearly a
state policy must be articulated for a municipality to be able to
establish that its anticompetitive activity constitutes state
action. Moreover, we have expressly left open the question whether
action by a municipality -- like action by a private party -- must
satisfy the "active state supervision" requirement.
Boulder,
supra, at
455 U. S. 51-52,
n. 14. We consider both of those issues below.
III
The City cites several provisions of the Wisconsin code to
support its claim that its allegedly anticompetitive activity
Page 471 U. S. 41
constitutes state action. We therefore examine the statutory
structure in some detail.
A
Wisconsin Stat. § 62.18(1) (1981-1982) grants authority to
cities to construct, add to, alter, and repair sewage systems. The
authority includes the power to "describe with reasonable
particularity the district to be [served]."
Ibid. This
grant of authority is supplemented by Wis.Stat. § 66.069(2)(c)
(1981-1982), providing that a city operating a public utility
"may by ordinance fix the limits of such service in
unincorporated areas. Such ordinance shall delineate the area
within which service will be provided and the municipal utility
shall have no obligation to serve beyond the area so
delineated."
With respect to joint sewage systems, Wis.Stat. § 144.07(1)
(1981-1982) provides that the State's Department of Natural
Resources may require a city's sewage system to be constructed so
that other cities, towns, or areas may connect to the system, and
the Department may order that such connections be made. Subsection
(1m) provides, however, that an order by the Department of Natural
Resources for the connection of unincorporated territory to a city
system shall be void if that territory refuses to become annexed to
the city. [
Footnote 4]
B
The Towns contend that these statutory provisions do not
evidence a state policy to displace competition in the provision of
sewage services, because they make no express mention
Page 471 U. S. 42
of anticompetitive conduct. [
Footnote 5] As discussed above, the statutes clearly
contemplate that a city may engage in anticompetitive conduct. Such
conduct is a foreseeable result of empowering the City to refuse to
serve unannexed areas. It is not necessary, as the Towns contend,
for the state legislature to have stated explicitly that it
expected the City to engage in conduct that would have
anticompetitive effects. Applying the analysis of
Lafayette v.
Louisiana Power & Light Co., 435 U.
S. 389 (1978), it is sufficient that the statutes
authorized the City to provide sewage services and also to
determine the areas to be served. We think it is clear that
anticompetitive effects logically would result from this broad
authority to regulate.
See New Motor Vehicle Board v. Orrin W.
Fox Co., 439 U. S. 96,
439 U. S. 109
(1978) (no express intent to displace the antitrust laws, but
statute provided regulatory structure that inherently "displace[d]
unfettered business freedom").
Accord, 1 P. Areeda &
D. Turner, Antitrust Law � 212.3, p. 54 (Supp.1982).
Page 471 U. S. 43
Nor do we agree with the Towns' contention that the statutes at
issue here are neutral on state policy. The Towns attempt to liken
the Wisconsin statutes to the Home Rule Amendment involved in
Boulder, arguing that the Wisconsin statutes are neutral,
because they leave the City free to pursue either anticompetitive
conduct or free-market competition in the field of sewage services.
The analogy to the Home Rule Amendment involved in
Boulder
is inapposite. That Amendment to the Colorado Constitution
allocated only the most general authority to municipalities to
govern local affairs. We held that it was neutral, and did not
satisfy the "clear articulation" component of the state action
test. The Amendment simply did not address the regulation of cable
television. Under home rule, the municipality was to be free to
decide every aspect of policy relating to cable television, as well
as policy relating to any other field of regulation of local
concern. Here, in contrast, the State has specifically authorized
Wisconsin cities to provide sewage services, and has delegated to
the cities the express authority to take action that foreseeably
will result in anticompetitive effects. No reasonable argument can
be made that these statutes are neutral in the same way that
Colorado's Home Rule Amendment was. [
Footnote 6]
The Towns' argument amounts to a contention that, to pass the
"clear articulation" test, a legislature must expressly state in a
statute or its legislative history that the legislature intends for
the delegated action to have anticompetitive effects. This
contention embodies an unrealistic view of how legislatures work
and of how statutes are written. No legislature can be expected to
catalog all of the anticipated effects of a statute of this
kind.
Page 471 U. S. 44
Furthermore, requiring such explicit authorization by the State
might have deleterious and unnecessary consequences. Justice
Stewart's dissent in
Lafayette was concerned that the
plurality's opinion would impose this kind of requirement on
legislatures, with detrimental side effects upon municipalities'
local autonomy and authority to govern themselves. 435 U.S. at
435 U. S.
434-435. In fact, this Court has never required the
degree of specificity that the Towns insist is necessary. [
Footnote 7]
In sum, we conclude that the Wisconsin statutes evidence a
"clearly articulated and affirmatively expressed" state policy to
displace competition with regulation in the area of municipal
provision of sewage services. These statutory provisions plainly
show that "
the legislature contemplated the kind of action
complained of.'" Lafayette, supra, at 435 U. S. 415
(quoting the decision of the Court of Appeals, 532 F.2d 431, 434
(CA5 1976)). [Footnote 8] This
is sufficient to satisfy the "clear articulation" requirement of
the state action test.
Page 471 U. S. 45
C
The Towns further argue that the "clear articulation"
requirement of the state action test requires at least that the
City show that the State "compelled" it to act. In so doing, they
rely on language in
Cantor v. Detroit Edison Co.,
428 U. S. 579
(1976), and
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, 421 U.
S. 773 (1975). We disagree with this contention for
several reasons.
Cantor and
Goldfarb concerned
private parties -- not municipalities -- claiming the state action
exemption. This fact distinguishes those cases, because a
municipality is an arm of the State. We may presume, absent a
showing to the contrary, that the municipality acts in the public
interest. [
Footnote 9] A
private party, on the other hand, may be presumed to be acting
primarily on his or its own behalf.
None of our cases involving the application of the state action
exemption to a municipality has required that compulsion be shown.
Both
Boulder, 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 56-57,
and
Lafayette, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S.
416-417, spoke in terms of the State's direction or
authorization of the anticompetitive practice at issue. This is so
because, where the actor is a municipality, acting pursuant to a
clearly articulated state policy, compulsion is simply unnecessary
as an evidentiary matter to prove that the challenged practice
constitutes state action. In short, although compulsion
affirmatively
Page 471 U. S. 46
expressed may be the best evidence of state policy, it is by no
means a prerequisite to a finding that a municipality acted
pursuant to clearly articulated state policy.
IV
Finally, the Towns argue that, as there was no active state
supervision, the City may not depend on the state action exemption.
The Towns rely primarily on language in
Lafayette. It is
fair to say that our cases have not been entirely clear. The
plurality opinion in
Lafayette did suggest, without
elaboration and without deciding the issue, that a city claiming
the exemption must show that its anticompetitive conduct was
actively supervised by the State. 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 410.
In
California Retail Liquor Dealers Assn. v. Midcal Aluminum,
Inc., 445 U. S. 97
(1980), a unanimous Court held that supervision is required where
the anticompetitive conduct is by private parties. In
Boulder, however, the most recent relevant case, we
expressly left this issue open as to municipalities. 455 U.S. at
455 U. S. 51-52,
n. 14. We now conclude that the active state supervision
requirement should not be imposed in cases in which the actor is a
municipality. [
Footnote
10]
As with respect to the compulsion argument discussed above, the
requirement of active state supervision serves essentially an
evidentiary function: it is one way of ensuring that the actor is
engaging in the challenged conduct pursuant to state policy. In
Midcal, we stated that the active state supervision
requirement was necessary to prevent a State from circumventing the
Sherman Act's proscriptions "by casting . . . a gauzy cloak of
state involvement over what is
Page 471 U. S. 47
essentially a private price-fixing arrangement." 445 U.S. at
445 U. S. 106.
Where a private party is engaging in the anticompetitive activity,
there is a real danger that he is acting to further his own
interests, rather than the governmental interests of the State.
Where the actor is a municipality, there is little or no danger
that it is involved in a private price-fixing arrangement. The only
real danger is that it will seek to further purely parochial public
interests at the expense of more overriding state goals. This
danger is minimal, however, because of the requirement that the
municipality act pursuant to a clearly articulated state policy.
Once it is clear that state authorization exists, there is no need
to require the State to supervise actively the municipality's
execution of what is a properly delegated function.
V
We conclude that the actions of the City of Eau Claire in this
case are exempt from the Sherman Act. They were taken pursuant to a
clearly articulated state policy to replace competition in the
provision of sewage services with regulation. We further hold that
active state supervision is not a prerequisite to exemption from
the antitrust laws where the actor is a municipality, rather than a
private party. We accordingly affirm the judgment of the Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.
It s so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The City is located in both Eau Claire and Chippewa
Counties.
[
Footnote 2]
The complaint also alleged violations of the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251
et seq., and
of a common law duty of a utility to serve. The District Court
dismissed these claims, and they are not at issue in this
Court.
[
Footnote 3]
Midcal was originally brought as a mandamus action
seeking an injunction against a state agency, the California
Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control. The State played no role,
however, in setting prices or reviewing their reasonableness,
activities carried out by the private wine dealers. 445 U.S. at
445 U. S.
100-101. The mere fact that the state agency was a named
defendant was not sufficient to alter the state action analysis
from that appropriate to a case involving the state regulation of
private anticompetitive acts.
See Southern Motor Carriers Rate
Conference, Inc. v. United States, post at
471 U. S.
56-57.
[
Footnote 4]
There is no such order of the Department of Natural Resources at
issue in this case.
[
Footnote 5]
The Towns also rely on Wis.Stat.Ann. §§ 66.076(1) and
66.30 (1965 and Supp.1984) to argue that the State's policy on the
provision of sewage services is actually procompetitive. This claim
must fail because, aside from the fact that it was not raised
below, the provisions relied upon do not support the contention.
First, it is true that § 66.076(1) permits certain
municipalities, including towns, to operate sewage systems. The
provision is simply a general enabling statute, however, not a
mandatory prescription. In addition, subsection (8) of §
66.076 incorporates into the enabling statute all of the
limitations of § 66.069, including the power to limit the area
of service. Thus, § 66.076(1) does not express a
procompetitive state attitude.
Nor does § 66.30 aid the Towns. It is a general provision
concerning all utilities -- not just sewage systems -- that permits
municipalities to enter into cooperative agreements. The statute is
not mandatory, but merely permissive. Moreover, even assuming two
municipalities agreed pursuant to this section to cooperate in
providing sewage services, the result would not necessarily be
greater competition. Rather, the two combined might well be more
effective than either alone in keeping other municipalities out of
the market.
[
Footnote 6]
Nor does it help the Towns' claim that the statutes leave to the
City the discretion whether to provide sewage services. States must
always be free to delegate such authority to their political
subdivisions.
[
Footnote 7]
Requiring such a close examination of a state legislature's
intent to determine whether the federal antitrust laws apply would
be undesirable also because it would embroil the federal courts in
the unnecessary interpretation of state statutes. Besides burdening
the courts, it would undercut the fundamental policy of
Parker and the state action doctrine of immunizing state
action from federal antitrust scrutiny.
See 1 P. Areeda
& D. Turner, Antitrust Law � 212.3(b) (Supp.1982).
[
Footnote 8]
Our view of the legislature's intent is supported by
Town of
Hallie v. City of Chippewa Falls, 105 Wis.2d 533,
314 N.W.2d
321 (1982), in which the Supreme Court of Wisconsin rejected
the Town of Hallie's challenge under state antitrust laws against
the City of Chippewa Falls in a case quite similar to the one at
bar. There, the Town of Hallie argued that the City's refusal to
provide it with sewage treatment services, the requirement of
annexation, and the City's conditioning of the provision of
treatment services on the acceptance also of sewage collection and
other city services, violated the state antitrust laws. The State
Supreme Court disagreed, concluding that the legislature intended
the City to undertake the challenged actions. Those actions
therefore were exempt from the State's antitrust laws. Analyzing
§§ 66.069(2)(c) and 144.07(1m), the court concluded that
the legislature had
"viewed annexation by the city of a surrounding unincorporated
area as a reasonable
quid pro quo that a city could
require before extending sewer services to the area."
Id. at 540-541, 314 N.W.2d at 325.
Although the Wisconsin Supreme Court's opinion does not, of
course, decide the question presented here of the City's immunity
under the federal antitrust laws, it is instructive on the question
of the state legislature's intent in enacting the statutes relating
to the municipal provision of sewage services.
[
Footnote 9]
Among other things, municipal conduct is invariably more likely
to be exposed to public scrutiny than is private conduct.
Municipalities in some States are subject to "sunshine" laws or
other mandatory disclosure regulations, and municipal officers,
unlike corporate heads, are checked to some degree through the
electoral process. Such a position in the public eye may provide
some greater protection against antitrust abuses than exists for
private parties.
[
Footnote 10]
In cases in which the actor is a state agency, it is likely that
active state supervision would also not be required, although we do
not here decide that issue. Where state or municipal regulation by
a private party is involved, however, active state supervision must
be shown, even where a clearly articulated state policy exists.
See Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, Inc. v. United
States, post at
471 U. S.
62.