ROBERT M. DOW, Jr., United States District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Defendant Schreiber Foods, Inc.'s motion for
This MDL action was reassigned from Judge Hibbler's docket to this Court's docket on April 30, 2012.
Named Direct Purchaser Plaintiffs ("Plaintiffs") are Indriolo Distributors, Inc., a cheese distributor; Knutson's, Inc., a dairy farmer and Class III milk futures trader; and Valley Gold, LLC, a raw milk purchaser. Plaintiffs initially sued the following Defendants: Defendant Dairy Farmers of America, Inc. ("DFA"), a dairy marketing cooperative consisting of more than 18,000 dairy farmers in 48 states; Defendant Keller's Creamery LP, a butter manufacturer headquartered in Kansas City, Missouri, and wholly owned by DFA; Defendant Gary Hanman, the President and Chief Executive Officer of DFA from January 1, 1998 until December 31, 2005; Defendant Gerald Bos, the Chief Financial Officer of DFA from January 1, 1998 until December 31, 2005; Defendant Frank Otis, the Chief Executive Officer of Keller's in 2004; and Defendant Glenn Millar, the Vice President of Procurement and Operations for Keller's in 2004.
The direct purchaser cases have been consolidated for pre-trial proceedings in this docket. The direct purchasers' amended corrected consolidated class action complaint ("initial complaint") [86] alleged that Defendants violated Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act (Counts 1-3), violated the Commodity Exchange Act ("CEA"), 7 U.S.C. § 1 et seq, (Count 4), were unjustly enriched at Plaintiffs' expense (Count 5), and violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO") (Count 6). The initial Defendants collectively filed motions to dismiss, which Judge Hibbler denied in part and granted in part [141 and 142]. All parties named in the initial complaint have reached a settlement with Plaintiffs. The Court has issued an order granting preliminary approval of the settlement and a fairness hearing is set for August 19, 2014.
On March 22, 2012, Plaintiffs filed a second amended class action complaint [245], which added Schreiber Foods, Inc. ("Schreiber") as a named Defendant and added a Cartwright Act claim under California law. Defendant Schreiber is an employee-owned manufacturer and distributor of natural cheese, process cheese, and cultured dairy products, such as cream cheese and yogurt, headquartered in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Schreiber moved to dismiss the second amended class action complaint. The Court granted in part and denied in part Defendant Schreiber's motion to dismiss, dismissing Counts 2 and 3 (monopolization and attempted monopolization in violation of § 2 of the Sherman Act) and allowing Plaintiffs to go forward with their claims arising under § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 (Count I), § 22 of the Commodity Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C. § 25 (Count IV), and the Cartwright Act (Count V), as well as a claim labelled "unjust enrichment and restitution" (VI). Schreiber now moves for summary judgment on these remaining claims.
This litigation has been going on for five years, and Schreiber has been a Defendant for at least two. Although Plaintiffs understandably have been preoccupied with settling the portion of the case that relates to the DFA Defendants, Schreiber also understandably wants its role in these events adjudicated. To that end, in order
Fortunately for Plaintiffs, they have had in their possession for ample time documents and deposition testimony from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission ("CFTC") investigation. Even if the CFTC investigation was focused on manipulation by Defendants, and not a conspiracy including Schreiber, the massive amount of information collected, both in the form of documents and depositions, undoubtedly provides a window into the conduct of the relevant players in the market during the relevant time period.
Since the summary judgment motion was filed, Plaintiffs also have conducted additional (albeit limited) Rule 56(d) discovery.
Instead of filing a "concise" response to Schreiber's fact statements, Plaintiffs have submitted upwards of three-to-five-page responses to many of those fact statements, attempting to insert new facts into the record while also denying certain of Schreiber's statements. (In contrast, Schreiber's responses never exceeded one page and usually were limited to a concise paragraph.) Although many of Plaintiffs' responses are improper (see, e.g., De v. City of Chicago, 912 F.Supp.2d 709, 715 (N.D.Ill.2012) ("It is improper, and a violation of Local Rule 56.1, for the nonmoving party to add additional facts to his Local Rule 56.1(b)(3)(B) response"); Prewitt v. United States, 2012 WL 5381281 at *2 (N.D.Ill. Oct. 31, 2012)), in the interest of efficiency, the Court has reviewed and considered the entire 113-page response to Schreiber's fact statements. However, it also is the function of the Court to eliminate from consideration any argument, conclusions, and assertions that are unsupported by the documented evidence of record offered in support of the statement. Thus, to the extent that Plaintiffs' response (i) inserts facts not included in their own lengthy statement of additional
In 2004, Schreiber sold more than 1.26 billion pounds of natural and process cheese to its customers, making it one of the largest cheese manufacturers and distributors in the world. The natural cheese sold by Schreiber is produced directly from milk or is purchased in large blocks and then cut into smaller sizes and packaged for sale. The process cheese sold by Schreiber can be made with cheese produced from milk that Schreiber purchases, or it can be made from cheese purchased in 500-pound barrels. Most of Schreiber's products are purchased for use by restaurants and other foodservice distributors or are produced as store brand ("private label") products for grocery stores.
During the first eleven of thirteen periods in fiscal year 2004, Schreiber purchased in the vicinity of 550 million pounds of bulk cheese, at a cost of approximately $1.2 billion. Most of Schreiber's cheese purchases were of block and barrel cheddar cheese. Schreiber purchased approximately 93 million pounds of that cheese from DFA, at a cost of approximately $179.9 million. DFA was Schreiber's second largest supplier in 2004, and Schreiber was one of DFA's largest customers. Schreiber also purchased about 1.2 billion pounds of milk in 2004 for use in the production of process cheese. By comparison, in fiscal year 2003, Schreiber purchased approximately 602 million pounds of bulk cheese, at a cost of approximately $841.5 million. Schreiber purchased approximately 116 million pounds of that cheese from DFA, at a cost of approximately $159 million.
Block and barrel cheddar cheese have different uses and come in different packaging (and also can have slight variations in moisture content and color). But to the undiscerning eye, they essentially are the same product: cheddar cheese. In 2004, Schreiber purchased most of its bulk cheddar cheese directly from suppliers, but it also purchased a small fraction (between 4-5 million pounds) of spot cheese on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange ("CME").
The CME hosts the trading of commodity futures trading contracts, including Class III milk futures (Class III is the federal designation of milk used to make cheese and whey) and spot commodities, including spot block cheddar cheese, spot barrel cheddar cheese, and spot butter. Trading of spot block and barrel cheddar cheese is backed up by required immediate delivery of the commodity traded and cannot be cash-settled without the exchange of the underlying commodity. Each load of spot block or barrel cheddar cheese traded on the CME consists of 40,000 to 44,000 pounds of cheese. The CME spot block and barrel cheddar cheese markets serve an informal "price discovery" function, and many cheese transactions in the wider market are priced based on the CME block and barrel cheese prices.
In 2004, trading in spot cheese on the CME usually occurred Monday through Friday for ten minutes per day on the trading floor of the CME through a process called "open outcry." Open outcry is a method of public auction for making bids
According to the evidence of record, block packaging costs typically are three to three and a half cents higher per pound than barrel packaging costs, suggesting that packaging is a significant factor as to why blocks traded on the CME historically sell for about three cents more per pound than barrels. The differential between the CME block and barrel closing prices is known in the industry as "the spread." The actual spread, however, is not always three cents. The prices of blocks and barrels move independently, so the spread can fluctuate to levels above and below three cents. Additional factors, such as supply and demand, affect the spread. And, as explained below, the CME cheese markets are far from perfect in comparison to other traded commodities with a greater and more diverse number of participants. According to Schreiber, it has an interest in maintaining a three-cent spread, because a larger spread between blocks and barrels can be damaging to barrel cheese producers and producers of process cheese.
Milk sold in the United States usually is subject to either federal or state pricing orders that set the minimum price that processors must pay for milk. The calculation of the federal order price for milk sold for making cheese (Class III milk) is based indirectly on the historical average spread between block and barrel cheddar cheese. In essence, the federal government averages the market prices of block and barrel cheese after adding three cents to the barrel price to account for the assumed spread, then factors that number into the calculation of the minimum Class III order price. Thus, it is no surprise that the parties agree that the price of cheese is the most significant commodity component in the United States Department of Agriculture ("USDA") Class III milk price formula.
Traditionally, the CME spot cheese markets are thinly traded, and the actions of a few participants can increase or decrease the price of block or barrel cheese without changing the price of the other. Despite the fact that millions of pounds of bulk cheddar cheese are sold in the United States every day, on many days few or no loads of spot cheese are traded on the
According to Schreiber, because it purchases around 1.2 billion pounds of milk to turn into process cheese every year, a large spread decreases Schreiber's profit on milk turned into and sold as process cheese.
Similarly, Chris Herlache, a Risk Analyst and the Schreiber employee in charge of CME cheese trading during the relevant period, testified during the CFTC proceedings that it was to Schreiber's benefit to maintain a three cent spread and that it was a "general practice" at Schreiber. The testimony of record is that the spread between blocks and barrels therefore is a factor that Schreiber considers in making purchases of cheese. Obviously, other barrel and process cheese producers have a similar interest in the spread. Other factors that Schreiber considers include market conditions, current inventory and sales needs, the availability of cheese from other sources, and supply and demand projections. The record further reflects that Schreiber would purchase barrel cheese on the CME in a manner that would correct or maintain the spread.
During 2004, Schreiber was one of the largest cheese distributors in the world. Higher CME cheese prices can (but do not always) benefit Schreiber's business. DFA was one of the largest sellers of milk in the United States and also benefits from higher CME cheese prices. In February, March, April, May, June, July, September, October, and December of 2004, Schreiber maintains that it purchased, attempted to purchase, or contemplated purchasing barrels on the CME in part
On January 30, 2004, the spread was 7 cents. David Pozniak, Schreiber's President and COO of Global Sales and Development, oversaw the individuals who were in charge of making purchases in the cash and futures markets. On February 2, 2004, when the spread was 5.75 cents, Pozniak wrote to Chris Herlache, the Schreiber employee charged with conducting and supervising Schreiber's CME trading in 2004, "Chris, if there is any opportunity for us to help bid on barrels to close the gap then we should consider doing it especially since the markets are trending up and maybe its [sic] possible." On February 3, when the spread was 5 cents, Herlache responded, "If others are bidding I can try to get behind them. If there is a lot of selling interest, are we OK with buying a load or two? If not, I'll bid a little more cautiously." On February 5, when the spread was 4.25 cents, Pozniak responded, "[Y]es * * * okay with that plan." However, Schreiber ultimately did not purchase any cheese on the CME in February 2004.
On March 15, 2004, Pozniak sent an e-mail to Schreiber officers, stating:
On March 16, 2004, Ron Dunford responded to Mr. Pozniak's e-mail stating: "Just one `watch out' * * * our customers are not pleased with the current high pricing and will be even less pleased if they somehow find out that we are involve [sic] in helping drive the market up. Let's hope that the `confidential trading' at the CME remains that way." Deborah Van Dyk, Schreiber's Vice President of Industry & Regulatory Affairs responded stating:
On April 2, 2004, Chris Herlache e-mailed "Officers" stating:
If barrels had risen to $2.17, the spread would have been 3 cents. Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels on April 23, 2004. On April 27, 2004, the spread was 5 cents. The next day, Schreiber purchased 4 loads of barrels.
Between May 4 and May 5, 2004, the spread grew from 3.5 cents to 11.5 cents. On May 5, 2004, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels at a price $2.04. One other load of barrels traded at $2.05. On May 11, 2004, the spread increased from 11.5 cents to 22 cents.
On May 20, 2004, when the spread remained at 17 cents, 6 loads of barrels were traded; Schreiber purchased 4 of these loads at $1.8275, $1.8300, $1.8300, and $1.8275. The market closed at $1.8300. On May 21, 2004, the price of blocks fell to $1.80, and the barrel price fell to $1.61. Schreiber purchased 1 load of barrels at the closing price, and the spread grew to 19 cents. Also on May 21, 2004, Herlache sent an e-mail to the President's Staff at Schreiber, detailing the day's activity on the CME:
On May 25, 2004, 13 loads of barrels traded on the CME: 7 at $1.7675, 4 at $1.7700, 1 at $1.7650, and 1 at $1.7600. Schreiber purchased all 13. No blocks were traded. The next day, Schreiber purchased 10 loads of barrels at $1.7700, 8 loads at $1.7675, 1 at $1.7600, and 1 at $1.7650. On May 27, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels at $1.7700, 1 at $1.7675, and 1 at $1.7600, and on May 28, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels at $1.7625 and 1 at $1.7700. On June 1, 2004, no barrels were traded, but DFA purchased 14 loads of blocks.
On June 1, 2004, Larry Ferguson, Schreiber's CEO, sent a letter to Craig Donohue at the CME, alerting Donohue to recent activity in the block and barrel markets and expressing concern about the spread and the lack of anonymity in trading:
After Ferguson sent the letter, the trading on the CME in June 2004 proceeded with DFA and Schreiber purchasing 100% of the barrel and block cheese that was traded over the next few weeks. On June 2, 2004, Schreiber purchased 1 load of barrels at $1.7600 and 2 at $1.7700. The following day, no barrels were traded, however, DFA purchased 22 loads of blocks. On June 4, Schreiber purchased 1 load of barrels at $1.7700 and 1 load at $1.7675, and on June 7, Schreiber purchased 2 additional loads of barrels at $1.7650 and $1.7700, respectively. On June 8, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels at $1.7600. On June 9, no barrels were traded, but DFA purchased 11 loads of blocks. On June 10, Schreiber purchased 1 load of barrels at $1.7700 and 1 at $1.7675. On June 14, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels at $1.7575, 1 at $1.7525, 2 at $1.7600, 1 at $1.7500, 2 at $1.7700, and
Also on June 23, 2004, Herlache sent an e-mail to Schreiber personnel regarding the drop in prices of block and barrel cheese on the CME:
By June 28, 2004, the price of CME barrel cheese had dropped thirty-seven cents to $1.40 per pound. No CME barrels traded from June 23 through June 28, 2004. By June 28, 2004, the price of CME block cheese had dropped forty-two cents to $1.38 per pound. Fewer than 10 CME blocks traded from June 23 through June 28, 2004.
On July 28, 2004, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels. Herlache provided Pozniak and Nancy Schwenke, Schreiber's Vice President of Procurement,
On September 8, 2004, the spread was 5.75 cents. Schreiber purchased 2 of the 5 barrels traded that day. The spread fell to 4 cents on September 9 and 3.75 cents on September 10, then on September 14, it grew from 3.75 cents to 7.5 cents. That same day, Schreiber purchased 4 loads of barrels.
On September 17, 2004, Herlache sent an e-mail to Nancy Schwenke and Chip Smoot regarding Schreiber's CME activity:
The spread grew to 4.75 cents on September 20, 2004 and to 6.5 cents on September 22, and Schreiber purchased 1 of the 7 loads of barrels traded on September 22, 2004. Herlache provided the following summary of Schreiber's September 22 CME activity to a number of Schreiber personnel:
The e-mail also noted that DFA bought all loads of blocks that were traded that day. On October 1, 2004, Herlache sent another summary of CME trading activity to Pozniak and Schwenke:
On December 2, 2004, the spread had grown to 15.5 cents. On December 3, 2004, Pozniak wrote to Chip Smoot about the spread between blocks and barrels: "Because of the high spread, I think it's ok to go ahead and buy up to 3 loads today if it would help anybody in the market to close the spread. If the blocks begin to fall, ideally the market will fall with it and that will be the way it goes. Whatever works out fine." Smoot replied: "We didn't buy anything today. Barrels did go up by $.04 and blocks stayed the same so the gap closed somewhat."
Schreiber and DFA purchased, respectively, 100% of the CME barrel cheese and 100% of the CME block cheese traded on the CME during the time period May 24 through June 22, 2004. In total, Schreiber purchased 79 carloads of CME barrel cheese (between 3,160,000 and 3,476,000 pounds) while DFA purchased 304 carloads of CME block cheese (between 12,160,000 and 13,376,000 pounds). Between approximately April 14 through July 6, 2004, Schreiber increased its barrel inventory and purchases significantly as a proportion of overall inventory. From April 13, 2004 to August 3, 2004, Schreiber's CME barrel purchases increased from zero pounds to 4.4 million pounds. Despite having an average barrel inventory of 7.4 million pounds from October 1, 2003 through April 13, 2004, Schreiber did not purchase from the CME until April 2004. In fiscal year 2004 (October 2013 to September 2014), Schreiber purchased 120 loads of CME barrel cheese. Of those 120 barrels, 107 barrels (or approximately 89%) were purchased between April 20, 2004 and June 22, 2004.
In 2004, Gary Hanman, Chief Executive Officer ("CEO") of DFA, made the ultimate decisions for DFA's purchases on the CME. Mark Korsmeyer served as DFA's President of American Dairy Brands, which was one of three business units under DFA's Dairy Food Products umbrella. American Dairy Brands was DFA's branded retail business, which included Borden cheese and the "typical retail grocer trade, the Wal-Mart Super Centers, the local HyVee type customers of the world." Korsmeyer reported to Sam McCroskey, who was the President of DFA's Dairy Food Products. Korsmeyer also gave orders with respect to Class III milk futures trading. Korsmeyer had "full business responsibility for American Dairy Brands," was responsible for its profits and losses of that division, and made all of the decisions with respect to American Dairy Brands. He also was responsible for the sales and marketing of finished products that the Dairy Foods Group produced.
On May 7, 2004, Hanman sent a memorandum to DFA personnel stating that DFA had, during the week beginning on May 3, 2004, "supported the [CME block cheese] market at $2.15." On May 21, 2004, Hanman sent another memorandum, stating that "It will be difficult to hold $1.80 for blocks if barrels stay at $1.61." That is, DFA had to "defend" the 19-cent CME block-barrel spread if it wanted to continue to "support" CME block cheese prices. Hanman further noted that defending a large spread was difficult with sellers like "Glanbia bringing blocks to the exchange to adjust the spread." The parties agree that Schreiber knew that DFA was supporting the CME block cheese market at $1.80.
DFA employees, led by Hollon, attempted to track daily purchases and the identities of participants on the CME spot block cheese, barrel cheese, and butter markets. Typically they did so by matching the floor broker making a bid or offer with the trader that the broker usually represented. Hollon or other DFA employees who followed the open outcry on the CME regularly also sent out "Daily Cash Market" e-mails to "a wide range of people" from DFA that contained information purporting to identify the purchasers and sellers of block and barrel cheese and butter traded on the CME each day.
DFA also maintained a database in 2004 of all trades, bids, and offers in the spot cheese and butter markets and the purported identity of each trader, bidder, or offeror. Hanman also sent out fax transmissions containing charts summarizing activity on the CME ("Hanman Activity Charts") every week. The Hanman Activity Charts list the number of loads of block cheddar cheese, barrel cheddar cheese, and butter traded on the CME every week. The Hanman Activity Charts also identified or attempted to identify the seller and buyer of each load traded.
In his April 23, 2004 fax, Hanman wrote: "Twenty loads of barrels were traded this
The May 21, 2004 Hanman Activity Chart identifies Hilmar as the supposed seller of 23 loads of block cheese and Glanbia as the seller of 5 loads on the CME during the week. It also identifies Schreiber as the purported purchaser of 5 loads of barrel cheese on the CME during the week. The fax transmission further notes:
In his May 28, 2004 fax, Hanman wrote: "Today's barrel closing price of $1.77 was up 16¢ from last Friday's close. 43 loads of barrels were traded this week. Schreiber was the primary buyer." The May 28, 2004 Hanman Activity Chart identifies Schreiber as the purchaser of 36 loads of barrel cheese traded during the week, SAW as the purchaser of 7 loads, Bongards as the seller of 40 loads, and Misc. Brokers as the sellers of 3 loads.
The June 4, 2004 Hanman Activity Chart notes that 107 loads of block cheese were traded during the week and that 5 loads of barrels were traded during the same week. According to the Chart, Schreiber purchased 4 of the 5 loads of barrel cheese traded, and Glanbia purchased 1 load. The fax also notes that "all week Schreiber has been the defender of the barrel market — maintaining a 3[cent] spread between blocks and barrels. They again stepped up today and held the barrel market at $1.77." The June 4 chart also identifies the purchasers of butter during the week as AgriTrading (6), DariGold (39), Fulton's (1), and Iowa Trading (1), and the sellers as ConAgra (8), Dreyers (11), Fulton's (2), and Rich Dairies (20).
In his June 11, 2004 fax, Hanman wrote:
The June 11 chart identifies the sellers of barrel cheese during the week as Glanbia (1), Kroger (4), and RIS (1). It also identifies the purchasers of butter during the week as AgriTrading (3), Bert Lewis (3), and DariGold (5), and the sellers of butter
In his June 18, 2004 fax, Hanman wrote:
The June 18 chart provides DFA's "best estimate" of the sellers of block cheese as Jacoby (4), AgriTrading (4), Bongards (9), Jerome's (11), Dairystates (38), Kraft (8), Hilmar (6), and Kroger (2). It also identifies the sellers of barrels as Joe Gressel (1), and Kraft (16), the purchasers of butter as AgriTrading (11), Bert Lewis (3), California Dairies (1), DariGold (32), Grassland (8), and MINR (5), and the sellers of butter as Dreyers (16), JBJ Trading (1), Morningstar (Dean) (8), MINR (20), Rich Dairies (10), and ROZE (5). 128.
The June 25 Hanman Activity Chart provides DFA's "best estimate" of the sellers of block cheese during the week as AgriTrading (3), Bongards (2), and Dairystates (13). It also identifies the sellers of barrels as Joe Gressel (2), Kraft (6), the purchasers of butter as AgriTrading (16), Bert Lewis (2), California Dairies (7), DFA (6), DariGold (41), Fulton's (5), Joe Gressel (1), Morningstar (6), Iowa Trading (1), and Dean (1), and the sellers of butter as ConAgra (11), Dreyers (25), Fulton's (3), Kroger (5), Morningstar (Dean) (4), Rich Dairies (37), and RIZ (1). The fax also noted that "[t]oday's barrel closing price of $1.46 ½ was down 30 ½ [cents] from last Friday. Eight loads of barrels were traded this week — with Schreiber the buyer."
On May 18, 2004, Glenn Millar sent an e-mail to John Wilson and Frank Otis regarding conversations he had regarding the spread and its relationship to current and projected CME market activity:
On May 19, 2004, Wilson replied to Millar, "Thanks, Glenn. I welcome any intelligence."
On May 21, 2004, Frank Otis of Keller's wrote to Jerry Bos and John Wilson at DFA regarding his perception of how barrel
On May 22, 2004, Glenn Millar sent an e-mail to John Wilson regarding his perceptions of the futures and spot cheese markets:
The parties agree that DFA regularly sought to defend or support the CME block market because of the impact that it had on the prices that its dairy farmers received for milk. DFA's actions were well-known in the industry, and it was widely reported that DFA was the primary purchaser of block cheese in May and June of 2004. For instance, the May 7, 2004 issue of Dairy & Food Market Analyst reported:
In a similar vein, on May 11, 2004, Sam Khoury, a purchaser for Taco Bell, forwarded DFA employees Mark Korsmeyer and Lavonne Dietrich the Dairy & Food Market Analyst report and asked Korsmeyer, "[W]hy the aggressive buying on the CME?"
Also in May 2004, Dairy Marketing Services reported that "
Similarly, the June 4, 2004 issue of Dairy & Food Market Analyst reported:
Then, on June 11, 2004, Dairy & Food Market Analyst reported: "The purported buyer (Dairy Farmers of America) of all of the blocks offered for sale this week remains convinced that cheese supplies will be tight this fall."
It was common for DFA to speak with its customers about market conditions, including conditions on the CME spot markets. DFA was one of Schreiber's largest suppliers, and, as set forth in detail below, DFA and Schreiber employees communicated regarding such matters as pending and proposed transactions, purchasing and sales needs and projections, market trends and developments, quality issues, and complaints or other input from downstream customers. As repeatedly pointed out by Plaintiffs, Schreiber and DFA also were competitors.
Hanman was on the Board of Directors of Schreiber from the late 1980s to the early 1990s. By 2004, Hanman and Schreiber's CEO, Larry Ferguson, had long known one another and had met in private with one another to resolve issues from time-to-time. As set forth above, the record reflects that Hanman kept track of Schreiber's purchases of barrel cheese between May 24, 2004 and June 22, 2004, by reviewing charts prepared by DFA employees that attempted to track the identity of each buyer, seller, bidder, and offeror on the CME spot cheese and butter markets throughout all of 2004. Plaintiffs admit that DFA and Hanman used the charts to track Schreiber's CME positions; however, Plaintiffs also highlight meetings and conversations between DFA and Schreiber executives from April 28 to June 2004. In total, between April 28 and May 26, 2004, Schreiber's top executives and DFA's top executives met five times, on April 28, April 30, May 1, May 11, and May 26.
For instance, on April 28, 2004, Hanman and Ferguson met at DFA's offices. Hanman does not recall meeting or what was discussed; Ferguson claims that the men discussed a patent infringement lawsuit.
On May 11, 2004, Hanman, Mark Korsmeyer, and Sam McCroskey took a private jet to Green Bay, Wisconsin, where they met with Ferguson and David Pozniak in
The first "Discussion Topic" on the agenda for the May 11 meeting was "market conditions & forecasts." Schreiber admits that DFA would start each quarterly meeting with its forecast on the CME market. According to Ferguson,
Hanman testified that during these meetings he and Ferguson typically "would visit about" "how you read the markets," such as:
Conversely, Ferguson testified that "I don't recall us ever giving DFA a forecast because our, we're not forecasters. We're cheese manufacturers."
DFA and Schreiber also communicated with one another regarding a concept referred to as the "One Market." On January 21, 2004, Pozniak e-mailed Deborah Van Dyk, Schreiber's Vice President of Industry and Regulatory Affairs, about his communications with DFA regarding "One Market":
According to Hanman, the "One Market" concept was a "movement within the [] industry to only have one market on the CME." And Schreiber was the "primary pusher" of the "One Market" concept. John Wilson, who was Van Dyk's contact at DFA regarding "One Market," testified that the "One Market" concept was "about having a single market for cheese at the CME and eliminating the trading of barrels." Pozniak knew of this and had arranged for Van Dyk to help DFA in this respect.
In another communication between DFA and Schreiber, on May 13, 2004, Elvin Hollon of DFA e-mailed Van Dyk as follows: "I may be getting an audience at the CME on the replacement cheese issue in the next week or so. I may want you to make a call. Who do you clear trades thru?" On May 17, 2004, Ms. Van Dyk
On May 17, 2004, Van Dyk reported her communications with DFA to Dave Pozniak:
Plaintiffs also contend that DFA's Hollon reached out to Schreiber to discuss selling steel barrels. John Wilson "suspect[ed]" that Hollon reached out to Schreiber, but also noted that he probably reached out to "lots of other industry participants about the various issues that would have included steel barrels."
On May 25, 2004, Tom Goddard sent an e-mail to Korsmeyer and Dietrich, reflecting his conversations with certain DFA customers and CME market participants, including Schreiber, about "comments relative to current market levels":
In addition to meetings and written correspondence, the parties agree that DFA and Schreiber employees communicated regularly by phone between May and June 2004. There is little, if any, detail in the record as to the substance of these phone calls.
The parties agree that extreme fluctuations and periods of extended price stability are both relatively common on the thinly traded CME block and barrel cheese markets. Aside from the flat line of $1.80 for 21 trading days from May 21 to June 22, 2004 (the period on which the complaint focuses), block prices have flat lined numerous times between 2000 and the present, including for:
Similarly, in the CME barrel market, aside from the flat line at $1.77 for 20 trading days from May 24 to June 22, 2004 (the period on which the complaint focuses), barrel prices have flat lined the following times since January 1, 2000:
In light of these statistics, Plaintiffs point out that both block and barrel prices were constant during the period on which the complaint focuses, while during the remainder of the 2000-2014 period, there was no other period in which both prices were constant for 20 days.
Schreiber also points to extended stagnation in the spread. Aside from the 21-day flat line in the spread from May 24 to June 23, 2004, since 2000 the spread has flat lined:
Large spreads also occur with some frequency. Since 2000, spreads above 17 cents have occurred on multiple occasions, including July 30, 2008 (32 cents), December 21-22, 2009 (27 cents), December 18, 2009 (26.25 cents), December 3-4, 2009 (25.75-26 cents), December 7-17, 2009 (24 cents), December 2, 2009 (22.75 cents), August 14, 2000 (22.5 cents), August 11, 2000 (21.5 cents), November 26, 2003 (21 cents), December 1, 2003 (21 cents), August 15-18, 2000 (19-19.75 cents), November 25, 2003 (18 cents), and December 1, 2009 (18 cents).
Large fluctuations in CME prices during a single day also are not unusual. According to data on the Daily CME Barrel Cheddar Cheese Price compiled by Understanding Dairy Markets, aside from the 16 cent increase in the barrel price on May 24, 2004 and the 19.5 cent decrease on June 23, 2004 (the period on which the complaint focuses), the barrel price changed 28 cents on July 30, 2008, 22.75 cents on December 18, 2007, 22.5 cents on December 11, 2008, 22 cents on May 21, 2004, 20 cents on December 13, 2004, 16.75 cents on March 12, 2004, 16.5 cents on three occasions in 2008 and 2012, 15.75 cents on October 6, 2004, 15 cents on July 31, 2008, 14.5 cents on November 5, 2003, and 14 cents on September 30, 2008. Similarly, the figures for Daily CME Block Cheddar Cheese Price from Understanding Dairy Markets reflect that aside from the 20 cent and 19.5 cent decreases in the block price on May 21 and June 23, 2004, the block price changed 28 cents on December 13, 2004, 20.25 cents on December 6, 2004, 19.25 cents on November 29, 2007, 18 cents on December 11, 2008, 16 cents on March 12, 2004, 15.5 cents on June 25, 2004, 15.25 cents on November 18, 2011, 15.25 cents on January 7, 2008, 15 cents on May 12, 2004, 14.5 cents on December 21, 2007, 14.25 cents on March 3, 2004, and 14 cents on March 23, 2012.
Schreiber's daily average purchases of CME barrel cheese during the May 24 through June 22, 2004 time period (approximately 3.95 loads per trading day) were approximately 20.8 times larger than Schreiber's historical eight-year daily average of 0.19 loads per trading day (excluding the May 24 through June 22, 2004 time period) during the time period from January 1, 1999 through December 31, 2006. Schreiber's daily average purchases of CME barrel cheese during the May through June 22, 2004 time period were approximately 4.6 times larger than the historical eight-year daily average of 0.86 loads per trading day for entire CME barrel market (excluding Schreiber). Schreiber's purchase of 100% of the CME barrel cheese traded on the CME during the May 24 through June 22, 2004 time period is approximately 5.4 times greater than Schreiber's historical eight-year average purchases of approximately 18.4% of the CME barrel cheese traded on the CME (excluding the May 24 through June 22, 2004 time period).
DFA's daily average purchases of CME block cheese during the May 24 through June 22, 2004 time period (approximately 15.2 loads per trading day) was approximately 11.4 times larger than
The twenty-one (21) trading day flat-line in the CME block-barrel spread from May 24 to June 23, 2004 is an all-time record during the time period January 1, 1998 through the present. The twenty (20) trading day flat-line in the CME barrel market from May 24 to June 22, 2004 is an all-time record during the time period January 3, 2000 through the present. The twenty-one (21) trading day flat-line in the CME block market from May 21 to June 22, 2004, is the second longest flat line during the time period from January 3, 2000 through the present.
In the summer of 2004, DFA conceived a plan to reduce its inventory by at least 25-30 million pounds, which DFA called an "Inventory Reduction Plan" or "inventory liquidation plan." On June 16, 2004, Lavonne Dietrich suggested to Mark Korsmeyer that, because DFA had a "mountain of inventory to move," DFA should subsidize the freight for sales of blocks to Sysco, an opportunity that Dietrich believed represented the sale of 12-15 million pounds. Bob Crotinger wrote back that same day, agreeing with the plan because he "like[d] the approach to finding solutions to using up this mountain of cheese."
Larry Ferguson testified that Gary Hanman called him in "late June, early July [of 2004], don't know the exact date but it was in that time period * * * it was kind of after the market had fallen [on June 23, 2004]" to discuss the 5 million pound sale. According to Hanman, the deal "was substantial, and it was a one-shot deal * * *." He further testified that he thought that it "was a part of that inventory [reduction] plan." According to Hanman, traditionally he did not "get involved in those, but since it was Larry —." The parties dispute who called whom.
On June 30, 2004, Mark Korsmeyer wrote Dietrich, requesting "3-4 specific sales initiatives" to provide to Gary Hanman at DFA's July 2, 2004 inventory meeting. Dietrich then forwarded Korsmeyer's e-mail to several DFA employees, asking, "If you had .15 to .25/lb. to move our inventory, who would you sell and what?" Goddard responded on July 1, 2004 with an idea for selling Schreiber "a minimum of 5 mil. pounds @ $1.500 lb. discount up to a $.25 lb. discount for 10 mil. lbs." of DFA's "existing CME colored cheddar inventory." On July 2, 2004, Korsmeyer sent an e-mail to various DFA employees with attached "Inventory Elimination Plans" that Korsmeyer planned to discuss at that day's inventory meeting. One of those ideas was to sell ~ 5 million pounds of cheese to Schreiber. The other two ideas were to sell ~ 10 million pounds to Blue Line and ~ 20 million pounds to Sysco. Korsmeyer presented the Inventory Elimination Plans to Hanman and other DFA employees on July 2, 2004. Another set of Inventory Elimination Plans presented by the American Dairy Brands group included using discounts to achieve incremental volume increases of 4 million pounds of cheese to private label customers, 2 million pounds to Heluvagood Co-Pack, 2 million pounds in Puerto Rico, and 10 million pounds to Borden Branded Naturals.
Tom Goddard testified that he thinks he "learned of [the 5 million pound sale from DFA to Schreiber] in the inventory meeting." Tom Goddard "called Nancy [Schwenke of DFA] when [he] got back to [his] office, either after the meeting or the next day, and said, `Nancy, I think our presidents have been speaking and you and I have a buy/sell to arrange and administer,' and she didn't know anything about it, so she had to go back and as a result sent me the e-mail." On July 13, 2004, Schwenke e-mailed Goddard, Dan Fonnesbeck of Schreiber, and "NLSteam": "Tom, Confirming our conversation, Schreiber Foods Inc. has agreed to purchase 5 million lbs of 40lb Cheddar Blocks from DFA at today's block market of $ 1.4050 delivered."
Dietrich replied, "Great Job!" Korsmeyer forwarded Goddard's e-mail to Sam McCroskey.
Communications about cheese purchases were ongoing from June through August 2004. On June 17, 2004, Tom Goddard wrote an e-mail to Lavonne Dietrich entitled "highlights": "Talked to [Schreiber] @ Clinton, MO and expect to get multiple truckload orders per week of blocks (cheddar an m j) via Corona starting shipments in early to mid-July. I have to wait until 6/29 to call him after he returns from vacation." On June 21, 2004, Kari Youngbauer at Schreiber wrote to DFA about a potential purchase. Tom Goddard at DFA asked internally to "respond as soon as possible so we can internalize the below business" because "we need all the business we can get." On June 23, 2004, Dietrich responded to a chain of e-mails about sourcing sales by routing cheese from DFA's Smithfield plant by stating, "Great, let's reduce the pile!" On June 23, 2004, Gabriel Sevilla, a DFA employee, e-mailed Sam McCroskey (of DFA) with "leads for export sale of cheese" and suggesting the sale of over 6.6 million pounds or more to Algil, with delivery to occur in San Diego/Tijuana, 1 to 5 truck loads of cheddar blocks per month from June to December to Schreiber Mexico, 1.1 million pounds (or possibly double) of yellow cheddar to Jacoby Mexico, a potential sale of white cheddar to Nosawa in Japan, a potential sale of Monterey jack, Colby and cheddar blocks to Doosan in Korea, an unspecified potential sale to Schreiber Brazil, an unspecified potential sale to Schreiber Saudi Arabia
On July 14, 2004, Sevilla wrote to McCroskey with a list of potential sales leads to foreign customers, including an offer of 1 million pounds of Monterey Jack to Algil Mexico at "7 cents under the market." McCroskey instructed an employee to send the list to Gary Hanman. On July 15, 2004, Sevilla again wrote to McCroskey with an update on his export efforts. Included in the update was a 3-month contract with Schreiber Germany for 300 metric tons (approximately 661,000 pounds) per month at a price of $1.22 per pound. Sevilla also discussed potential sales to Schreiber Saudi Arabia and Korea at discounted rates, the potential sale of 200-500 metric tons to Hoogwegt for export to North Africa, and the potential sale of 9,000 metric tons (approximately 19.8 million pounds) to Fonterra for export to various overseas markets.
Also on July 15, Dan Fonnesbeck e-mailed a group of Schreiber employees stating that he spoke to Tom Goddard about the 5 million pound block sale and noted:
At approximately the same time on July 15, Goddard sent an e-mail to Korsmeyer, Dietrich, and Sanders, memorializing his conversation with Dan Fonnesbeck. Goddard wrote:
Goddard also noted that Schreiber was "not receptive" to some of the manufacturers from whom DFA purchased CME cheese from and thus seemed skeptical that Schreiber would consider "existing available CME purchases."
Later on July 15, Goddard e-mailed a group of DFA employees, stating that he and Fonnesbeck discussed and agreed to the following:
On July 22, 2004, in response to an email from John Wilson with the subject line "Gary wants to know how sales are," Sanders noted that Dietrich sold 24 loads of CME cheese to Green Bay Cheese and 5-20 loads to Master's Gallery and that Sevilla completed the sale of 2.6 million pounds of cheese to Schreiber Mexico. Sanders also noted that Dietrich "still has a shot @ a distributor called Hidden Villa — 66 loads." On July 23, 2004, Doug Moore of DFA Corona sent a memorandum with details of the sale of 50 loads of block cheddar cheese at ten cents under the CME block market average, as well as 16 loads of Monterey Jack at five cents under the CME average. On July 30, 2004, McCroskey sent an e-mail to Shawn Kaddoura noting that DFA Corona had an inventory of over 25 million pounds of cheese and wondering "why we cannot ship 5 million pounds to Schreiber immediately. It has been about 3 weeks since the deal was made for the 5 million and we are going to have to produce and extend shipments into September." Also on July 30, Sanders sent a memorandum to McCroskey summarizing requests for analysis from Hanman regarding DFA's excess inventory of cheese and inventory reduction plan. He stated that "there is some number that we have taken a loss on by writing inventory down and then there is also approximately 25-30 million pounds that we are currently selling at discounted prices." Reports on the results of DFA's inventory reduction plan continued through August and into September.
By August 4, 2004 the "mix" of the 5 million pound sale to Schreiber changed and was broken down as follows: (1) Missouri: 20 loads shipped the week of July 26, 2004, 20 loads shipped the week of August 2, 2004, and 24 loads to be shipped the week of August 16, 2004; and (2) Utah: 25 loads shipping the week of August 2, 2004 and August 9, 2004, and 36 loads shipping the weeks of August 8, 2004 and August 16, 2004. This means that 64 loads were shipped to Missouri and 61 loads were shipped to Utah. Id. This totals 125 loads or 5 million pounds. Of the 64 loads shipped to Missouri at least 24 loads were "from current production." Of the 61 loads shipped to Utah, at least 5 loads were "up to 60 days of age" and at least 26 loads were "from current production." Thus, at least 50 loads or approximately 2 million pounds of block cheese came from current production.
There is no dispute that the market price at delivery was different than the price agreed to by the parties earlier in July.
Freight via truck from Corona, CA to Smithfield, UT was paid for by DFA. The cost of freight via truck from Corona, CA to Smithfield, UT was $.0317 per pound. In total, 61 of the 125 loads of cheese associated with the five million pound transaction were shipped to Utah. Thus, the total freight for this cheese was $77,348 and was paid by DFA. Freight from Corona, CA to other locations was paid for by DFA up to the amount it cost to ship to from Corona, CA to Smithfield, UT. Thus, the total price into Utah was $1.4050 or just the cost of the cheese (the block market price on July 13, 2004). The total price per pound to Americold storage in Carthage, MO from Corona, CA was $1.4126 ($1.4050 + $.0076). The $.0076 represents the difference in rail from Corona, CA to Americold in Carthage, MO ($.0393) and the delivered cost by freight (truck) from Corona, CA to Zollingers in Logan, Utah ($.0317). In total, 64 of the 125 loads were shipped to Missouri. Thus, the total freight for this cheese was $100,608. DFA paid $81,152 of this cost and Schreiber paid $19,456.
For the week ending July 1, 2004, DFA had a block cheese inventory of 72.8 million pounds, which was 35.8 million pounds more than their inventory in the same week in 2003. By the week ending August 26, 2004, DFA's block inventory had been reduced by 23.4 million pounds.
Named Direct Purchaser Plaintiffs Indriolo Distributors, Inc. and Valley Gold LLC did not transact in CME Class III milk futures contracts between April 1, 2004 and December 31, 2006. Named Plaintiffs Knutson's, Indriolo, and Valley Gold did not purchase CME spot cheese contracts between April 1, 2004 and December 31, 2006.
Summary judgment is appropriate when "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). In considering such a motion, the court must "draw[] all reasonable inferences in favor of" the
On a claim alleging a Sherman Act violation, "at the summary judgment stage a § 1 plaintiff's offer of conspiracy evidence must tend to rule out the possibility that the defendants were acting independently." Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 554, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007). The Supreme Court has said that "antitrust law limits the range of permissible inferences from ambiguous evidence in a § 1 case." Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 588, 106 S.Ct. 1348, 89 L.Ed.2d 538 (1986); see also Omnicare, Inc. v. United-Health Grp., Inc., 629 F.3d 697, 704 (7th Cir.2011). ("Even on summary judgment, district courts are not required to draw every requested inference; they must only draw reasonable ones that are supported by the record."). The Seventh Circuit has said that courts are first to assess whether Plaintiffs' "evidence of agreement is ambiguous — that is, whether it is equally consistent with the Defendants' permissible independent interests as it is with improper activity." Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 707. Second, "[i]f we conclude that the evidence could support the conclusion that Defendants were acting independently, we then look for any evidence that tends to exclude the possibility that Defendants were pursuing independent interests." Id. A plaintiff need not present evidence excluding all possibility that defendants were acting independently, but "there must be some evidence which, if believed, would support a finding of concerted behavior." Toys "R" Us, Inc. v. FTC, 221 F.3d 928, 934-35 (7th Cir.2000).
A plaintiff may prove its price-fixing case through direct or circumstantial evidence. The latter can include "economic evidence suggesting that the defendants were not in fact competing" as well as "noneconomic evidence suggesting that they were not competing because they had agreed not to compete." In re High Fructose Corn Syrup Antitrust Litig., 295 F.3d 651, 655 (7th Cir.2002). However, it is insufficient to show behavior that is merely parallel. "A statement of parallel conduct, even conduct consciously undertaken, needs some setting suggesting the agreement necessary to make out a § 1 claim; without that further circumstance pointing toward a meeting of the minds, an account of a defendant's commercial efforts stays in neutral territory." Bell Atl. Corp., 550 U.S. at 557, 127 S.Ct. 1955; see also Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 509 U.S. 209, 227, 113 S.Ct. 2578, 125 L.Ed.2d 168 (1993) (noting that this type of conduct has been called "conscious parallelism," which is "not in itself unlawful.") Although this standard does not mean an antitrust plaintiff "must overcome a heightened burden to defeat summary judgment," it does mean "that
Plaintiff's core theory is that, between May 24, 2004 and June 23, 2004, Schreiber conspired with DFA to purchase cheddar cheese traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in order to help DFA and Keller's Creamery, L.P. manipulate the price of Class III milk futures. According to Plaintiffs, Schreiber and DFA purchased cheese on the CME to stabilize prices while DFA and Keller's unwound their Class III milk futures positions at a profit, then Schreiber and DFA stopped buying cheese, causing the cheese price to crash at the end of June.
In turn, Schreiber contends that its purchasing activity was not unusual, was not parallel to DFA's activity, did not begin on May 24, and is fully explained by Schreiber's independent business interest in preventing a large spread between block and barrel prices from eroding Schreiber's profit margins.
Section 1 of the Sherman Act ("§ 1"), 15 U.S.C. § 1, works to prevent businesses from entering into collusive agreements.
To prevail under § 1, plaintiffs generally must prove three things: (1) that defendants had a contract, combination, or conspiracy ("an agreement"); (2) that as a result, trade in the relevant market was unreasonably restrained; and (3) that plaintiffs were injured. Omnicare, Inc. v. UnitedHealth Grp., Inc., 629 F.3d 697, 705 (7th Cir.2011); see also Denny's Marina, Inc. v. Renfro Prods., Inc., 8 F.3d 1217, 1220 (7th Cir.1993); cf. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 585-86, 106 S.Ct. 1348, 89 L.Ed.2d 538
To show concerted action, antitrust plaintiffs must produce evidence that would allow a jury to infer that the alleged conspirators "had a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective." Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp., 465 U.S. 752, 764, 104 S.Ct. 1464, 79 L.Ed.2d 775 (1984). Put another way, the circumstances of the case must show "a unity of purpose or a common design and understanding, or a meeting of minds in an unlawful arrangement." Am. Tobacco Co. v. United States, 328 U.S. 781, 810, 66 S.Ct. 1125, 90 L.Ed. 1575 (1946). Two separate, economic decision-makers must be joined, "depriv[ing] the marketplace of independent centers of decisionmaking and therefore of a diversity of entrepreneurial interests." Am. Needle, Inc. v. Nat'l Football League, 560 U.S. 183, 130 S.Ct. 2201, 176 L.Ed.2d 947 (2010) (quotation and citation omitted); see also Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., 467 U.S. 752, 769, 104 S.Ct. 2731, 81 L.Ed.2d 628 (1984) (noting that in an anticompetitive agreement, "two or more entities that previously pursued their own interests separately * * * combin[e] to act as one for their common benefit" in the restraint of trade); cf. Kartell v. Blue Shield of Mass., Inc., 749 F.2d 922, 930 (1st Cir.1984) ("Competitors cannot agree, for example, to insist that their contracts * * * contain arbitration clauses, even though each individual competitor can make up his own mind to insist upon such a term in any, or all, of his contracts."). Essentially, Direct Purchaser Plaintiffs must demonstrate that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Schreiber's decision to purchase spot cheese on the CME was made not by Schreiber alone but rather by Schreiber acting in concert with DFA while the two were competitors. See, e.g., Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 706.
Plaintiffs' case would be much stronger "if there were a smoking gun buried in the voluminous record." Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 706; see also In re High Fructose Corn Syrup Antitrust Litigation, 295 F.3d 651, 654 (7th Cir.2002) ("[A]n admission by the defendants that they agreed to fix their prices is all the proof a plaintiff needs."); In re Baby Food Antitrust Litig., 166 F.3d 112, 118 (3d Cir.1999) ("[W]ith direct evidence the fact finder is not required to make inferences to establish facts."). But Plaintiffs' case, like most in this vein, is "constructed out of a tissue of [ambiguous] statements and other circumstantial evidence." Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 706 (quoting In re High Fructose Corn Syrup Antitrust Litigation, 295 F.3d at 662). Therefore, they must present evidence from which a trier of fact can infer that Schreiber and DFA had an anticompetitive agreement. Id. at 654. That is, Plaintiffs "must show that the inference of conspiracy is reasonable in light of the competing inferences of independent action or collusive action that could not have harmed" it. Matsushita, 475 U.S. at 588, 106 S.Ct. 1348; see also Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 554, 127 S.Ct. 1955, 167 L.Ed.2d 929 (2007) ("[A]t the summary judgment stage a § 1 plaintiff's offer of conspiracy evidence must tend to rule out the possibility that the defendants were acting independently."); Miles Distribs., Inc. v. Specialty Constr. Brands,
As mentioned above, in assessing whether summary judgment is appropriate, the Seventh Circuit has repeatedly guided district courts to use a two-part inquiry. See Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 707; Market Force Inc. v. Wauwatosa Realty Co., 906 F.2d 1167, 1171 (7th Cir.1990); Serfecz v. Jewel Food Stores, 67 F.3d 591, 599 (7th Cir.1995); Res. Supply Corp. v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., 971 F.2d 37, 49 (7th Cir.1992). Within that structure, the Court first assesses whether Plaintiffs' evidence of agreement is ambiguous — "that is, whether it is equally consistent with [Schreiber's] permissible independent interests as it is with improper activity." Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 707 (quoting Market Force, 906 F.2d at 1171). If the Court concludes that the evidence could support the conclusion that Schreiber was acting independently, the Court then looks for "any evidence that tends to exclude the possibility that Defendants were pursuing independent interests." Id. In other words, Plaintiffs must "show that the inference of conspiracy is reasonable in light of the competing inference of independent action." Valley Liquors, Inc. v. Renfield Imps., Ltd., 822 F.2d 656, 660-61 (7th Cir.1987); see also Matsushita, 475 U.S. at 597 n. 21, 106 S.Ct. 1348 ("[C]onduct that is as consistent with permissible competition as with illegal conspiracy does not, without more, support even an inference of conspiracy.").
The starting point is what is obvious from the record. First, it cannot be disputed that Plaintiffs lack direct evidence that Schreiber agreed to join the alleged conspiracy. Direct evidence "is explicit and requires no inferences to establish the proposition or conclusion being asserted." In re Baby Food Antitrust Litig., 166 F.3d 112, 118 (3d Cir.1999) ("[W]ith direct evidence the fact finder is not required to make inferences to establish facts."). Plaintiffs have not come forward with such evidence.
Second, in support of its summary judgment motion, Schreiber submitted declarations from Larry Ferguson, former President of Schreiber, Nancy Schwenke, former Vice President of Purchasing, and Chris Herlache, Risk Analyst and the employee in charge of CME cheese trading during the relevant period. Each declarant (not surprisingly) denies that Schreiber agreed with DFA or Keller's to purchase cheese on the CME, coordinated with DFA on its CME trading, signaled or received signals from DFA, or had any knowledge of the alleged plan to inflate the price of Class III milk futures. Similarly, Individual Defendants Hanman, Bos, Otis, and Millar also have submitted affidavits. In those affidavits, they deny that Schreiber agreed to or was solicited to purchase cheese on the CME or to help DFA or Keller's impact any CME prices.
Having failed to uncover direct evidence that Schreiber agreed to help DFA and Keller's inflate their Class III milk futures positions, Plaintiffs' conspiracy claim rests on circumstantial evidence — namely, frequent and regular communication between the parties and Schreiber's purchases of barrel cheese contracts on the CME during part of the same time that DFA is alleged to have purchased block cheese. With respect to the frequent communications, the substance of those communications is largely unknown. While Plaintiffs portray regular interactions between the two companies as nefarious, their interpretation overlooks an obvious and innocuous reason for such interactions: DFA was one of Schreiber's main suppliers, Schreiber was one of DFA's largest customers, and the companies shared many legitimate business reasons to contact one another. While Plaintiffs repeatedly point out that Schreiber and DFA also were competitors, having repeated communications with a supplier, who also is a competitor in certain markets, does not a conspirator make. This is particularly true when not a single communication between Schreiber and DFA from either the CFTC investigation or this litigation suggests a meeting of minds to fix prices. Conversely, internal communications between employees of DFA and Keller's demonstrate open and routine discussion of their efforts to support cheese prices and the relationship between this support and their futures positions.
Without testimony, documents, or e-mails that imply an agreement, the focus must shift almost entirely to Schreiber's conduct — namely, its purchases of barrel cheese contracts between May 24 and June 23, 2004. Again, the starting point is what is known: Parallel conduct, standing alone, is insufficient to support an inference of conspiracy. Market Force Inc., 906 F.2d at 1172; see also White v. R.M. Packer Co., 635 F.3d 571, 580 (1st Cir.2011) ("Mere parallelism * * * does not even create a prima facie conspiracy case."). This is particularly true where a defendant can offer an independent business justification for its conduct. Market Force Inc., 906 F.2d at 1174 (explaining that "a defendant is entitled to summary judgment when it provides a plausible and justifiable alternative interpretation of its conduct that rebuts the alleged conspiracy") (internal quotation marks omitted).
Uncontroverted evidence (in the form of contemporaneous e-mails) shows that, beginning in February of 2004, Schreiber voiced a significant interest in narrowing the spread between barrel and block cheese on the CME. As set forth in detail
The evidence also suggests that Schreiber was attempting to mitigate the harmful effects of a large spread on its business prior to the alleged manipulation period. The record reflects that DFA began buying block cheese in large quantities in the middle of April, and its purchases allegedly caused block prices to rise relative to the barrel price. On May 5, the spread grew from 3.5 cents to 11.5 cents. That day, Schreiber purchased 2 loads of barrels. The spread increased to 22 cents on May 11, and Schreiber purchased 1 of the 2 loads of barrels traded that day. The spread fell to 7 cents the next day, before rising to 17 cents on May 13. Industry observers recognized that the large spread between block and barrel was adversely affecting barrel purchasers and predicted that those purchasers eventually would intervene in the market if the spread held. See, e.g., May 18, 2004 e-mail from Glenn Millar to John Wilson and Frank Otis (regarding conversations he had with Grain Miller's, Inc. and Hoogwegt (dairy commodities traders) as well as Jerry Dryer (industry analyst and publisher of the weekly e-letter Jerry Dryer's Dairy & Food Market Analyst) in which "[a]ll 3 of these groups stated, without prompting from me, that if blocks hold into mid next week the barrel guys will have to step in and close the spread. Some thought this might happen after 1-2 more showings of strength on the blocks."). And that's what
After the wide spread persisted on May 21, Schreiber placed several bids on May 24. Its bids went unfulfilled until the barrel price rose to about three cents less than the block price, at which point Schreiber's bids were met for sales of 3 loads — fewer than the four loads it purchased on May 20. The spread closed at three cents. Thereafter, the record reflects that as long as the block price stayed high, Schreiber intermittently purchased barrel cheese at a price in line with the traditional spread until June 22. But when the block price fell on June 23, 2004 (despite 3 block purchases by DFA), the falling block price was restoring the traditional spread. Schreiber did not purchase any barrels that day, and offers from sellers pushed the barrel price down concomitant with the falling block price (which maintained the spread at three cents). Schreiber did not purchase any more barrels until July 28, 2004, when the spread increased and it purchased 2 barrels.
The evidence — both Schreiber's communications and its conduct — reflects that beginning in February 2004, Schreiber's words and actions were consistent with an attempt to prevent large spreads from damaging its business. Its activity accelerated in April of 2004, and it again began to purchase barrel cheese on the CME on May 5, 2004, when the spread again grew out of line, not, as Plaintiffs claim, on May 24, when DFA supposedly needed Schreiber to join the conspiracy. Schreiber purchased barrels at various prices on May 11, May 20, and May 21 before allegedly joining the conspiracy on May 24. Plaintiffs attempt to isolate the May 24-June 23 period, but given that Schreiber purchased 4 loads of barrels on May 20, 1 load on May 21, and 3 loads on May 24, drawing the line at May 24 appears arbitrary. In addition, the last day on which Schreiber purchased barrels was June 22, but DFA continued to purchase blocks on June 23, even as the block price fell. When the block price collapsed after June 22, the reason for Schreiber's activity dissolved and it did not purchase any barrels on June 23. As the block price dropped, the barrel price was offered down by sellers in tandem. See Fact Stmt. ¶ 88 (June 23, 2004 e-mail from Herlache to Schreiber officers: "It is currently unknown why [DFA] chose today to pull their support, but I will pass on any information I do get. Block sellers were leading the decrease with barrels following to maintain a .03 spread."). Schreiber then resumed conduct consistent with attempting to correct the spread in July and even later in that year.
It is difficult to support an inference of conspiracy almost solely with conduct similar to that engaged in by Schreiber before its alleged participation in the conspiracy began and after it ended. It also is difficult to explain why the reason Schreiber purchased cheese on the CME between May 5 and May 21, 2004 (or earlier) was not the same reason it purchased cheese on the CME from May 24 to June 22, 2004. Further, if DFA and Schreiber were jointly attempting to support prices, why did Schreiber fail to help DFA stave off falling
Other circumstantial evidence belies a conspiracy. Plaintiffs allege that Gary Hanman broadcast after-the-fact knowledge of Schreiber's CME purchases during the alleged conspiracy period. But there is ample evidence suggesting that Hanman's knowledge of Schreiber's purchases came from daily efforts of DFA employees throughout all of 2004 to track the identity of all purchasers and sellers on the CME spot cheese and butter markets through the employees' "best estimate" of which market participant each floor broker represented. DFA's records, which Hanman attached to the weekly faxes from which the complaint quotes, list the activity not only of Schreiber, but also traders such as AgriTrading, Bert Lewis, Bongards, ConAgra, Dairystates, DariGold, Dean Foods, Dreyers, Glanbia, Grassland, Hilmar, Hoogwegt, Jacoby, Jerome's Kraft, Kroger, Morningstar, and Rich Dairies. Given Schreiber's inclusion among this group, the reasonable inference is that Hanman obtained his knowledge of Schreiber's purchases on the CME in the same way that he obtained his knowledge of every other market participant's activity: through reports generated by DFA employees who observed and tracked the activity of CME brokers.
Plaintiffs also allege that, on May 18, 2004, Glenn Millar of Keller's told DFA that Schreiber communicated to him that it would support the barrel price if DFA let the block price fall a little lower. According to Plaintiffs, this alleged "statement by Schreiber" constituted "an offer" from Schreiber to conspire. However, in context, the e-mail shows that in fact there was no statement by Schreiber and no offer, only a recounting of what Millar had heard during conversations with various market participants (which did not include
See Fact Stmt. ¶ 129; see also id. at ¶ 130 (response from J. Wilson of DFA) ("Thanks, Glenn. I welcome any intelligence."). Again, the reasonable inference from this e-mail is that Millar was privy to gossip among floor traders. It does not provide evidence of an understanding between Schreiber and DFA (or even of communications between Schreiber and Millar). In fact, this sort of speculation, coupled with undisputed evidence that demonstrates that Hanman's attempts to pinpoint Schreiber's purchases often were wrong,
Based on the foregoing evidence, reasonable jurors would not be able to infer that Schreiber had reached an unlawful agreement with DFA and Keller's; rather, the evidence as a whole supports an inference that, in May and June 2004, Schreiber independently engaged in activity on the CME in order to defend itself against an abnormally large spread of as much as 22 cents between the price of blocks of cheddar cheese and the price of barrels of cheddar cheese, a spread that allegedly was caused by DFA's attempt to inflate and support the block cheese price. Schreiber did not "suddenly" enter the
Given Schreiber's presentation of an independent, economically rational business justification for its actions in May and June 2004, the burden shifts to Plaintiffs to present evidence tending to exclude the possibility that Schreiber's CME purchases were motivated by its independent interest rather than by a desire to help DFA increase the value of its milk futures contracts. See Omnicare, Inc., 629 F.3d at 707; Market Force Inc., 906 F.2d at 1173-74. Plaintiffs need not present evidence excluding all possibility that defendants were acting independently, but "there must be some evidence which, if believed, would support a finding of concerted behavior." Toys "R" Us, Inc. v. FTC, 221 F.3d 928, 934-35 (7th Cir.2000); In re Text Messaging Antitrust Litigation, 46 F.Supp.3d at 801-02, 2014 WL 2106727, at *8 (N.D.Ill. May 19, 2014).
In responding to the foregoing evidence of independent action, Plaintiffs' focus is not entirely where it should be. Plaintiffs highlight that (1) Schreiber and DFA were the only participants in the CME market during this time, (2) their conduct was in fact driving the price of cheese up, and (3) Schreiber did not need to be purchasing expensive cheese. Despite Plaintiffs' insistence that Schreiber manipulated the barrel cheese market, the question is not whether Schreiber's conduct manipulated the barrel cheese market; rather, the question is whether it conspired with DFA to manipulate the price of milk futures. To be sure, rather than let the natural forces of supply and demand dictate the market, Schreiber appears to have been engaged in an effort to influence the barrel cheese market for its own benefit. See, e.g., March 15, 2004 internal e-mail from Pozniak ("We helped today close the spread with barrels, otherwise the block market is moving up from others. Unless there are major objections by you, we will bid if necessary to get more cheese at least to the $2 ranger [sic] over the next few days. The thought would be to allow the markets to go high enough that Kraft would have to raise their prices on the shelf to create aain [sic] a store brand and brand price difference."); March 16, 2004, internal e-mail from Dunford ("Just one `watch out' * * * our customers are not pleased with the
As described above, there are no communications between Schreiber and DFA from which a jury could infer an agreement to fix prices. Instead, a jury would have to infer that because the parties communicated regularly during the spring of 2004, they must have been conspiring. Such an inference requires too much of a leap, particularly given that Schreiber purchased hundreds of millions of dollars of cheese, milk, and cream from DFA every year
Aside from generally touting "frequent communications" and five meetings between April 28 and May 26, 2004 between the parties (two of which were at a social event attended by other industry participants),
Plaintiffs also point to a May 17, 2004 e-mail in which a Schreiber employee provided the (wrong) name of one of its three CME floor traders to a DFA employee. In the e-mail, Elvin Hollon, Director of Fluid Marketing for DFA, wrote to Deborah Van Dyk, Vice President of Industry and Regulatory Affairs for Schreiber, as follows: "I may be getting an audience at the CME on the replacement cheese issue in the next week or so. I may want you to make a call. Who do you clear trades thru?" Van Dyk responded: "We clear through Downs O'Neil — broker is usually Neil Kelne. Let me know if you want my support." As Van Dyk explained at her deposition, this communication concerned an ongoing industry issue regarding the replacement of cheese that had been purchased on the CME and delivered to the buyer, but which did not meet the previously described specifications for cheese traded on the exchange. Van Dyk Dep. 23:12-23. She testified that
To survive summary judgment, "there must be at least some evidence supporting a finding that defendants' communications involved collusion regarding prices." In re Text Messaging Antitrust Litig., 46 F.Supp.3d at 806, 2014 WL 2106727, at *11. "[T]he mere opportunity to collude is insufficient to establish a genuine issue for trial on this question." Id.; see also Williamson Oil Co. v. Philip Morris USA, 346 F.3d 1287, 1319 (11th Cir.2003) ("[T]he opportunity to fix prices without any showing that [the defendants] actually conspired does not tend to exclude the possibility that they did not avail themselves of such opportunity."). Here, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, there simply is not sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer collusion occurred during the meetings and phone calls between Schreiber and DFA in the spring of 2004, or "that the conspiracy was formed or advanced at any particular meeting or meetings." In re Text Messaging Antitrust Litig., 46 F.Supp.3d at 806, 2014 WL 2106727, at *12. Although Plaintiffs reference communications involving DFA and Schreiber that took place at or near the time of the CME activity at issue, they offer nothing other than speculation about the substance of these talks. Plaintiffs are "unable to point to anything beyond [their] own speculation to establish that [DFA and Schreiber] executives discussed collusive price increases" at numerous meetings. Id. at 807, 2014 WL 2106727, at *12. Taken as a whole, evidence of any concerted action involving spot cheese contacts is no more suggestive of collusion than of parallel behavior, and thus it does not permit a reasonable inference of a conspiracy. At best, Plaintiffs' evidence shows sustained intra-industry communications, but without more such communications show only the opportunity to collude. This is insufficient to give rise to a dispute of material fact on a § 1 claim. See, e.g., In re Text Messaging Antitrust Litig., 46 F.Supp.3d at 806-07, 2014 WL 2106727, at *12.
In sum, Plaintiffs have not pointed to communication between DFA and Schreiber in which the parties exchanged information regarding their past, current, or future CME purchases or intentions. Thus, as previously indicated, Plaintiffs' theory rests predominately on parallel conduct. And, as previously set forth, it is insufficient to show behavior that is merely parallel. Id. at 801-02, 2014 WL 2106727, at *8. "A statement of parallel conduct, even conduct consciously undertaken, needs some setting suggesting the agreement necessary to make out a § 1 claim; without that further circumstance pointing toward a meeting of the minds, an account of a defendant's commercial efforts stays in neutral territory." Bell Atl. Corp., 550 U.S. at 557, 127 S.Ct. 1955.
Plaintiffs' theory does not withstand scrutiny of the documents and testimony presented at summary judgment. First, regardless of whether the CEOs of each company can recall "who called whom" in the summer of 2004, internal DFA e-mails demonstrate that the idea to sell Schreiber five million pounds of cheese was conceived by DFA in July of 2004 as part of an "Inventory Reduction Plan" designed to liquidate excess inventory accumulated by DFA during its purchasing activity on the CME. By July 1, 2004, DFA had a block cheese inventory of 72.8 million pounds, which was 35.8 million pounds more than their inventory in the same week in 2003. Prior to July, DFA had been attempting to reduce its "mountain of cheese," including through potential sales of 10 to 20 million pounds to customers in Mexico, Japan, Korea, Brazil, North Africa, Puerto Rico, and Saudi Arabia.
Then, on June 30, 2004, Mark Korsmeyer asked DFA employees to generate "3-4 specific sales initiatives" to provide to Gary Hanman at DFA's July 2, 2004 inventory meeting. One idea generated, on July 1, 2004, was to offer Schreiber "a minimum of 5 mil. pounds @ $1.500 lb. discount up to a $.25 lb. discount for 10 mil lbs." of DFA's "existing CME colored cheddar inventory." On July 2, 2004, Korsmeyer sent out an Inventory Elimination Plan to discuss at that day's meeting with Hanman, including an idea to sell 5 million pounds of cheese to Schreiber. The two other ideas were to sell 30 million pounds to two other customers. At the inventory meeting, other employees presented ideas to sell 18 million pounds of cheese to various customers at discounted prices. On July 7, DFA employees again discussed offering Schreiber 5 million pounds of cheese. They also discussed selling 5 million pounds of cheese to Marathon and selling 30 million pounds of cheese in foreign markets through a program that subsidized the export of cheese.
On top of the contemporaneous, internal DFA e-mails, retired DFA employee Tom Goddard testified that the idea to sell Schreiber (and one other customer) five million pounds of block cheese was conceived after the alleged conspiracy had ended, in response to inquiries from DFA superiors about initiatives that might reduce DFA's excess supply of block cheese. See Goddard Dep. 55:3-9; 110:18-113:19. DFA employees subsequently met to go over the proposal, and the record reflects that the CEOs discussed the proposal. See Ferguson Dep. at 254:7-255:8. Then, inter-firm communications confirm that on July 13, 2004, Schreiber agreed to purchase five million pounds of block cheese from DFA at $1.4050 per pound — the price
In response to the testimony and documents in the record, Plaintiffs submitted a report from their accountant Charles Robinson. Robinson opines that Schreiber could not have received the market price for cheese anywhere else, that DFA's offer to pay shipping to (but no farther than) Utah was evidence of a favorable deal, and that Schreiber profited from the deal because, when the cheese finally was delivered, market prices were higher than they were when the deal was agreed to. See Aff. of Charles Robinson ("Robinson Aff.") ¶¶ 31-41. According to Robinson, these advantages managed to compensate Schreiber for the losses that it supposedly sustained in purchasing cheese on the CME in support of DFA's milk futures scheme.
Most notably, Plaintiffs' one-paragraph response on this issue
Furthermore, Plaintiffs contend that the purportedly favorable terms from the five million pound cheese transaction "approximately offset[]" the "amount of overpayments that Schreiber made for the CME barrel cheese it purchased" during the alleged conspiracy period. According to Plaintiffs' own calculations, Schreiber's conduct in the conspiracy "transferred" the pressure from DFA to Schreiber and led to "adverse financial consequences" for Schreiber. Pls.' Resp. at 5. But assuming that Plaintiff's theory is correct, Schreiber would not even have profited from the alleged scheme — at best, it would have broken even. Thus, Schreiber would have incurred the risk of participating in an illegal conspiracy, as well as supposed losses from buying barrel cheese for 20 days, in order to eventually construct a deal with DFA that would allow it to break even for the losses it supposedly sustained in purchasing cheese on the CME in support of DFA's milk futures scheme. This is not a reasonable inference.
Finally, even if the per-pound freight cost of three cents was favorable to Schreiber, the logical explanation for this, which is consistent with all of the documentary evidence and testimony, is that DFA needed to unload excess inventory. A reasonable jury simply could not find that this "sweetheart" deal
As previously set forth, the Seventh Circuit has said there are "two types" of circumstantial evidence on which a
But even one of Plaintiffs' experts, Professor Ed Jesse, acknowledges various independent reasons why Schreiber might have an economic interest in raising barrel prices in tandem with the rise in block prices, aside from the primary reasons advance by Schreiber (maintaining the spread at 3 cents). For instance, Dr. Jesse opines that "purchasing 100% of the CME barrel cheese to maintain prices at $1.77 through June 22" allowed Schreiber to protect "the value of inventory it held over that period" (Jesse Aff. ¶ 21); additionally, the higher CME prices meant "more profits for Schreiber from its flagship restaurant sales business" (id. ¶ 22); and further, "Schreiber believed that its retail business could benefit from higher CME prices if higher prices yielded an advantage over competitors" (id. ¶ 30). Thus, accepting for present purposes the validity of Dr. Jesse's opinions, they still would be consistent with an inference that Schreiber acted independently and in accordance with its own business interests. These reasons for Schreiber's conduct are "not economically irrational," nor do they suggest collusion between Schreiber and DFA. See Market Force, 906 F.2d at 1174 (affirming summary judgment where defendant submitted affidavits offering "several specific reasons" for its independent conduct that were "not economically irrational").
Plaintiffs' other expert, Professor Craig Pirrong, has opined that trading activity on the CME during the alleged conspiracy period was "highly unusual" and thus warrants an inference that DFA and Schreiber "cooperated." Although the evidence of record indicates (and Dr. Pirrong and Plaintiffs at least tacitly agree with Schreiber) that extreme price fluctuations and extended periods of price stability are relatively common on the thinly traded CME block and barrel cheese markets, Dr. Pirrong asserts that, once he "corrected" for the admitted frequency of extreme price fluctuations and extended periods of stability, there was an extraordinarily low probability that the precise 20-day flat line during May to June 2004 would have been observed in a competitive market. However, both Dr. Pirrong and Dr. Jesse are on record stating that the CME cheese markets are not competitive. More fundamentally, Dr. Pirrong's method involves calculating the probability of very particular events occurring without taking into account the probability of the occurrence of similar events. His work thus calculates a low probability of a precisely 20-day flatline, but it ignores periods of similar or even longer flatlines (such as the 62-day
Moreover, even accepting Dr. Pirrong's statistical analysis that these particular price fluctuations and extended period of price stability were "highly unusual," the inference that he draws from that analysis — that DFA and Schreiber cooperated — does not find the necessary support in the evidence. Like Dr. Jesse's analysis, Dr. Pirrong's analysis does not tend to exclude the possibility that Schreiber's actions were independently motivated by its desire to defend itself from the consequences of DFA's trading activity. See In re Text Messaging Antitrust Litig., 46 F.Supp.3d at 809-10, 2014 WL 2106727, at *14 (deeming experts' testimony to be of little value because their opinions did "not tend to exclude the possibility" that the defendants were acting independently).
This is particularly true when one looks at Schreiber's other efforts to close the spread. Contrary to Plaintiffs' claim that Schreiber's efforts in May and June 2004 were "radical" departures from its normal conduct, its concern in May and June mimicked its concern both before and after the alleged manipulation period. See supra pp. 951-53. Nor was 2004 the only year in which Schreiber attempted to correct an abnormally large spread. During the summer of 2000, between July 20 and August 14, the spread grew from one cent to 22.5 cents. On August 14, Schreiber purchased one load of barrels, then purchased 138 loads between August 16 and September 18, when the spread closed at 3.5 cents. When the spread began to grow again, Schreiber purchased another 49 loads between September 19 and October 10, 2000. Schreiber engaged in similar conduct in 2005, when it purchased three loads on September 16, 2005, when the spread was 9.75 cents, followed by another 21 loads between September 19 and October 3, 2005, while the spread hovered between 6 and 15.75 cents, ceasing its purchases when the spread fell to three cents on October 4. Then, in the fall of 2007, the spread grew from 2.5 cents to 11 cents between October 24, 2007 and November 5, 2007. Schreiber then purchased 23 loads of barrels over the next 23 days until the spread closed. In July 2008, the spread grew from three cents to 32 cents in 8 days; Schreiber purchased 78 loads between the time that the spread began to grow on July 21, 2008 and September 5, 2008, when the spread fell to one cent. And in November 2009, the spread held above ten cents for 13 days, then above 20 cents for 14 days. Schreiber then entered the market and purchased 8 loads over 6 days, ceasing when the spread fell to 2 cents.
In short, although the experts' reports present impressive breakdowns of the CME market and the conduct of Schreiber and DFA relative to that market, they "do little to demonstrate * * * any sort of agreement." Omnicare, 629 F.3d at 716. To be sure, taken alone or with the other evidence, Plaintiffs' arguments about the CME activity and the analyses behind them inevitably present differences of opinion. The evidence in this case is, after all, voluminous. However, Plaintiffs have not shown that the disputed facts create a reasonable inference that Defendants actually colluded to manipulate prices. What still is missing is evidence that would allow a reasonable jury to find collusion, as opposed to, for example, self-interested and independent behavior. Plaintiffs have not pointed to cases permitting such an inference from evidence of this sort. Nor can the opinions of their experts establish the existence of a dispute of material fact based on the same underlying evidence. The evidence does not tend to rule out the possibility of independent action; rather, it is "conduct as consistent with permissible
Although the Court has often discussed the evidence in isolation, the Court also must assess the evidence in the aggregate. The Seventh Circuit specifically warned in High Fructose Corn Syrup that courts must not "suppose that if no single item of evidence presented by the plaintiff points unequivocally to conspiracy, the evidence as a whole cannot defeat summary judgment." 295 F.3d at 655. "The question for the jury in a case such as this," the court said, "would simply be whether, when the evidence was considered as a whole, it was more likely that the defendants had conspired to fix prices than that they had not conspired to fix prices." Id. at 655-56. The Seventh Circuit has said in another context that this approach is akin to examining "a mosaic whose individual tiles add up to a complete picture." Morgan v. SVT, LLC, 724 F.3d 990, 995 (7th Cir.2013).
Reviewing Plaintiffs' evidence in this manner nonetheless produces the conclusion that a reasonable jury could not find in favor of Plaintiffs. Critically, Plaintiffs' evidence does not undermine Schreiber's position that its conduct was consistent with its independent business interests, and Plaintiffs' own expert concedes that Schreiber benefitted from closing the spread in what is admittedly regarded to be a non-competitive market. Plaintiffs' attempts to marginalize Schreiber's motivation are contradicted by the extensive evidence (temporally near and during the alleged manipulation period) demonstrating that Schreiber employees in fact were attempting to prevent a large spread from affecting their company's operations and profits. Taken as a whole, this is evidence that does not "reasonably tend[ ] to prove" that Schreiber consciously committed to a scheme with DFA designed to achieve an unlawful objective. See Monsanto, 465 U.S. at 764, 104 S.Ct. 1464. Rather, it appears that Schreiber was engaging in an independent effort to defend its interests by reducing the spread between CME block and barrel cheese prices caused by DFA's support of the block cheese price, which (Plaintiffs allege) was done in an effort to manipulate the price of milk futures.
At the end of the day, Plaintiffs' economic evidence, coupled with the wealth of documents and testimony evincing Schreiber's concern with the spread and Schreiber's conduct before and after the manipulation period, leads to a reasonable inference, just not the one urged by Plaintiffs: Schreiber was reacting to volatile (and unfavorable) changes in the spot cheese market (caused by DFA and Keller's) and continued its prior behavior of purchasing in such a way as to defend its own profits during the manipulation period. Given Schreiber's clearly documented independent interests, its "parallel conduct, even conduct consciously undertaken" does not "point[ ] toward a meeting of the minds." Bell Atl. Corp., 550 U.S. at 557, 127 S.Ct. 1955. In short, the evidence compiled does not present a question for a jury on whether Schreiber conspired to manipulate the price of milk futures by purchasing spot cheese on the CME.
Beginning with the language of the statute, § 22(a)(1) of the Commodity Exchange Act ("CEA"), 7 U.S.C. § 25(a)(1), provides in relevant part:
7 U.S.C.A. § 25(a)(1).
To begin with, two Direct Purchaser Plaintiffs lack standing to bring claims under the CEA because they did not transact in Class III milk futures during the relevant period. A condition precedent of § 25(a)(1)(D) is that the plaintiff purchased or sold a contract for future delivery. See Thompson's Gas & Elec. Serv., Inc. v. BP Am. Inc., 691 F.Supp.2d 860, 871 (N.D.Ill.2010) ("Section 22 specifies that only those persons trading in a contract of sale of any commodity for future delivery may bring suit, and it is well established that this language refers to a futures contract, rather than a cash-forward contract for sale of a physical commodity" (citing CFTC v. Zelener, 373 F.3d 861, 865-66 (7th Cir.2004))); In re Soybean Futures Litig., 892 F.Supp. 1025, 1041 (N.D.Ill.1995). Plaintiffs Indriolo Distributors, Inc. and Valley Gold, LLC have admitted that they did not transact in CME Class III milk futures contracts between April 1, 2004 and December 31, 2006. Further, Indriolo and Valley Gold's allegations that they purchased physical milk and cheese affected by Class III milk futures prices are of no moment. Purchasers
Additionally, Plaintiffs have not been entirely clear whether, in addition to a claim that Schreiber manipulated Class III milk futures, they also seek to find Schreiber liable for manipulation of the spot cheese market. Presumably, Schreiber's conduct (at least as the summary judgment record tells it) would be best suited for a claim based on manipulation of the spot cheese market. But unfortunately for Plaintiffs, such a claim is not tenable.
First, the CEA grants a private right of action only for manipulation of a futures market, and spot cheese is not a "future" within the meaning of the CEA. The CEA's private right of action refers only to "contracts for future delivery"; that is, a futures contract. See 7 U.S.C. § 25(a)(1)(B), (D); see also 7 U.S.C. § 1a(27) (stating that the "term `future delivery' does not include any sale of any cash commodity for deferred shipment or delivery"); Thompson's Gas & Elec. Serv., Inc., 691 F.Supp.2d at 871-72 ("In this Circuit, this means a futures contract."). Spot contracts, however, are not futures contracts. See CFTC v. Zelener, 373 F.3d 861, 863-64 (7th Cir.2004) (defining a futures contract); Nagel v. ADM Investor Servs., Inc., 217 F.3d 436, 437, 441 (7th Cir.2000) (distinguishing between an "ordinary" forward contract and a "contract for future delivery" and explaining the features of a futures contract). Spot contracts contemplate a contract for the exchange of title and delivery of the product within a short period and are not intended to facilitate speculation regarding the future price of the commodity. See Zelener, 373 F.3d at 863 (distinguishing spot markets from futures markets).
To demonstrate an aiding and abetting claim under § 22 of the CEA, Plaintiffs first must demonstrate the components of a manipulation claim against a principal. See Damato, 153 F.3d at 470-71. Plaintiffs then must prove that Schreiber (1) knew of the principals' intent to manipulate milk futures; (2) had the intent to further that manipulation; and (3) committed some act in furtherance of the scheme. In re Platinum and Palladium Commodities Litig., 828 F.Supp.2d 588, 598 (S.D.N.Y.2011).
As set forth in addressing Plaintiffs' § 1 claim, the evidence does not support a reasonable inference that Schreiber agreed to help DFA and Keller's manipulate the spot cheese markets. And the evidence is still more insufficient to support an inference that Schreiber knew of or intended to further the alleged scheme to manipulate the separate Class III milk futures market. Assuming (again for present purposes only) that DFA and Keller's were principal violators, Plaintiffs has not presented sufficient evidence that Schreiber knew of their intent or had any reason to want to help DFA and Keller's violate the CEA. Plaintiffs do not allege that Schreiber stood to profit from higher milk futures prices. Ferguson, Schwenke, and Herlache all have denied that they were aware of the alleged plan by DFA and Keller's to inflate the closing positions of milk futures, and they all deny that Schreiber purchased spot cheese in order
As previously indicated, to prevail on a claim of manipulation under the CEA, Plaintiffs must prove that Schreiber had the ability to manipulate market prices; an artificial price existed; Schreiber caused the artificial price to exist; and Schreiber specifically intended the artificial price to exist. In re Soybean Futures Litig., 892 F.Supp. at 1045. Specific intent requires "a showing that the accused acted (or failed to act) with the purpose or conscious object of influencing prices." Id. at 1059. Mere knowledge that certain actions might have an impact on the futures market is not sufficient to state a private claim under the CEA. See Hershey v. Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., 610 F.3d 239, 249 (5th Cir.2010) ("Under a specific intent standard, mere knowledge is not enough. Defendants must have specifically intended to impact the futures market.").
Schreiber contends that Plaintiffs' claim founders on the specific intent requirement. According to Schreiber, it had no interest in milk futures. Further, Schreiber contends that Plaintiffs have failed to allege, let alone present evidence, that Schreiber had an independent motive to inflate them. In response, Plaintiffs contend that Schreiber's internal documents reflect that Schreiber held and traded CME Class III milk futures positions in May and June 2004 in its "cheese opportunity account." Plaintiffs also contend that cheese traded on the CME is the "commodity underlying" a Class III milk futures contract and that Schreiber can be liable as a principal violator for manipulating the price of spot cheese.
With respect to Plaintiffs' argument that cheese traded on the CME is the "commodity underlying" a Class III milk futures contract, 7 U.S.C. § 25(a)(1)(D) permits a plaintiff who "purchased or sold a [contract for future delivery]" to recover for a violation "if the violation constitutes a manipulation of the price of any such contract or the price of the commodity underlying such contract" (emphasis added)). Unfortunately for Plaintiffs, courts have rejected arguments that a commodity with an indirect effect on a futures contract is the commodity underlying the futures contract. See, e.g., Hershey, 610 F.3d at 247; Three Crown Ltd. P'ship v. Caxton Corp., 817 F.Supp. 1033, 1043 (S.D.N.Y.1993) (holding that "while defendants' alleged manipulation of [secondary] Markets in Treasury notes may have adversely impacted positions plaintiffs took in the Treasury bill and Eurodollar futures markets," Treasury notes "are not the commodity `underlying'" those futures). Although spot cheese prices are a "significant component" in the USDA Class III milk price formula, CME cheese simply is not the underlying commodity in a milk futures contract. As the Fifth Circuit noted in Hershey, the commodity underlying a futures contract is the commodity specified for future delivery, the price of which determines the settlement price of the futures contract. 610 F.3d at 247; accord Three Crown Ltd. P'ship, 817 F.Supp. at 1043 ("Based on standard definitions of a `futures contract,' the phrase `the commodity underlying such [futures] contract' in § 22(a)(1)(D) refers to the commodity specified within the particular futures contract."). In this case, the commodity specified
Plaintiffs have not offered any authority supporting their conflicting interpretation of "commodity underlying" a futures contract. Plaintiffs cite Hershey v. Energy Transfer Partners, L.P., in support of their position, but Hershey actually rejected a substantially similar argument to that advanced here:
Id. at 247. According to the Fifth Circuit, even though natural gas prices everywhere directly affect the price of natural gas delivered at the Henry Hub (just like the price of spot cheese affects the price of milk), "[u]nder the CEA, actionable manipulation must be directed at `the price of the commodity underlying such contract,'" and, "[b]y definition, the underlying of a futures contract depends on the contract itself." Id. (citing 7 U.S.C. § 25(a)(1)(D) (emphasis in original)). The court further explained that "[i]t is undisputed that the contract in question here is the NYMEX natural gas futures contract. Therefore, Plaintiffs must allege that Defendants specifically intended to manipulate the underlying of that contract, not some hypothetical natural gas futures contract." Id. (emphasis in original).
The Fifth Circuit's logic compels the same result here. The commodity specified within Class III milk futures contract traded on the CME is Class III milk, an actual commodity, and, as set forth above,
That leaves Plaintiffs' contention that Schreiber's purchases of barrel cheese demonstrate a specific intent to manipulate milk futures. But there is a dearth of evidence in the record that suggests that Schreiber's barrel cheese purchases from May 24 to June 23 were undertaken with the purpose or conscious object of affecting milk futures prices. Hershey, 610 F.3d at 249; see id. at 248 (rejecting allegations that defendants "knew or should have known that their manipulation of natural gas prices at HSC would result in the artificial suppression of the prices of NYMEX natural gas futures contracts" where the defendants had no interest in the futures). There is no evidence in the record that Schreiber was interested in milk futures (unlike the evidence of Schreiber's almost-unwavering interest in the spread between CME blocks and barrels
In the face of this logical inference, the only evidence that Plaintiffs offer with respect to Schreiber's interest in milk futures prices is that Schreiber held 150 long positions for May 2004 in its internal risk management (hedging) account. Schreiber's small number of May futures positions (approximately 1% of alleged holdings of DFA and Keller's (reported to be in excess of 15,000 speculative long futures positions during the alleged manipulation period) simply are insufficient to lead a reasonable jury to conclude that they engaged in a risky, illegal conspiracy to manipulate the price of milk futures.
Plaintiffs' final claim against Schreiber is for unjust enrichment and restitution.
For these reasons, the Court grants Defendant Schreiber's motion for summary judgment [430]. Judgment will be entered in favor of Schreiber and against Direct Purchaser Plaintiffs on all claims asserted against it.
In a similar vein, on June 24, 2004, Chris Hanson of Carlson Restaurants Worldwide, one of DFA's customers, sent an e-mail to Lavonne Dietrich of DFA, asking: "Lavonne, What's the story on the block and barrel market trending down right now?"