Star Scientific Inc v. Beales , 278 F.3d 339 ( 2002 )


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  •                            PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INCORPORATED, a           
    Delaware corporation,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    RANDOLPH A. BEALES, in his official
    capacity as Attorney General,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    DKT LIBERTY PROJECT; ALABAMA;
    ALASKA; ARIZONA; ARKANSAS;
    CALIFORNIA; CONNECTICUT; DELAWARE;
    THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA; GEORGIA;
    HAWAII; IDAHO; ILLINOIS; INDIANA;
    IOWA; KANSAS; KENTUCKY; LOUISIANA;
    
    MAINE; MARYLAND; MASSACHUSETTS;
    MICHIGAN; MINNESOTA; MISSOURI;                 No. 01-1502
    MONTANA; NEBRASKA; NEVADA; NEW
    HAMPSHIRE; NEW JERSEY; NEW MEXICO;
    NEW YORK; NORTH CAROLINA; NORTH
    DAKOTA; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS;
    OHIO; OKLAHOMA; OREGON;
    PENNSYLVANIA; PUERTO RICO; SOUTH
    CAROLINA; SOUTH DAKOTA; TENNESSEE;
    UTAH; VERMONT; WASHINGTON; WEST
    VIRGINIA; WISCONSIN; WYOMING;
    AMERICAN LEGACY FOUNDATION;
    AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY; AMERICAN
    HEART ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN LUNG
    ASSOCIATION; NATIONAL CENTER FOR
    TOBACCO-FREE KIDS,
    Amici Curiae.     
    2                   STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond.
    James R. Spencer, District Judge.
    (CA-00-835-3)
    Argued: November 1, 2001
    Decided: January 22, 2002
    Before NIEMEYER, WILLIAMS, and GREGORY,*
    Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion,
    in which Judge Williams joined.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Charles Fried, Cambridge, Massachusetts, for Appellant.
    Gregory E. Lucyk, Senior Assistant Attorney General, OFFICE OF
    THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Patrick M. McSweeney, Kathleen Moriarty Mueller,
    John L. Marshall, Jr., MCSWEENEY & CRUMP, P.C., Richmond,
    Virginia; James F. Neal, James G. Thomas, W. David Bridgers,
    NEAL & HARWELL, P.L.C., Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant.
    Randolph A. Beales, Attorney General of Virginia, Francis S. Fergu-
    son, Chief Deputy Attorney General, J. Steven Sheppard, III, Senior
    Assistant Attorney General, David B. Irvin, Senior Assistant Attorney
    General, Sydney E. Rab, Assistant Attorney General, OFFICE OF
    THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.
    William M. Hohengarten, Julie M. Carpenter, Janis C. Kestenbaum,
    JENNER & BLOCK, L.L.C., Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae
    DKT Liberty Project. Bill Lockyer, Attorney General of the State of
    *Judge Gregory heard oral argument in this case but has since recused
    himself. The decision is filed by a quorum of the panel pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 46
    (d).
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                     3
    California, Richard M. Frank, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Den-
    nis Eckhart, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Karen Leaf, Deputy
    Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, Sac-
    ramento, California, for Amici Curiae States. Ellen J. Vargyas,
    AMERICAN LEGACY FOUNDATION, Washington, D.C.; Jona-
    than E. Nuechterlein, Jonathan J. Frankel, Mary E. Kostel, C. Colin
    Rushing, WILMER, CUTLER & PICKERING, Washington, D.C.,
    for Amici Curiae Foundation, et al.
    OPINION
    NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
    Star Scientific, Inc., a cigarette manufacturer, challenges the consti-
    tutionality of the Master Settlement Agreement of November 16,
    1998, between the Commonwealth of Virginia — as well as 45 other
    States — and the major tobacco manufacturers. It also challenges the
    constitutionality of legislation enacted by the Commonwealth of Vir-
    ginia to qualify it to receive payments under the Master Settlement
    Agreement.
    To settle the States’ lawsuits against the major tobacco manufactur-
    ers arising from their development and marketing of cigarettes, Vir-
    ginia and the 45 other States, as well as the District of Columbia and
    5 territories, entered into a Master Settlement Agreement with Phillip
    Morris, Inc., R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Brown & Williamson
    Tobacco Corporation, and Lorillard Tobacco Company. The Master
    Settlement Agreement calls for the tobacco manufacturers to pay the
    States, in exchange for releases from liability for past and future dam-
    ages, approximately $200 billion over the next 25 years, including
    approximately $4.1 billion to the Commonwealth of Virginia.
    Star Scientific, which contends that it has not engaged in the mis-
    conduct attributed to the major tobacco manufacturers and was not
    sued by any of the States, asserts that it will be unjustly burdened by
    the requirements of the Master Settlement Agreement and the legisla-
    tion that Virginia enacted pursuant to the agreement. It therefore com-
    menced this action to challenge the constitutionality of both the
    4                   STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    settlement agreement and the statute. The district court granted Vir-
    ginia’s motion to dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(6).
    On appeal, Star Scientific contends that the statute enacted pursu-
    ant to the Master Settlement Agreement, 
    Va. Code Ann. §§ 3.1-336.1
    & 3.1-336.2, violates its rights under the Due Process, Equal Protec-
    tion, and Commerce Clauses of the United States Constitution. It also
    contends that the Master Settlement Agreement itself violates the
    Compact Clause.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
    I
    In 1994, the Attorneys General of Mississippi, Minnesota, West
    Virginia, and Massachusetts filed lawsuits in their respective State
    courts against the major tobacco manufacturers, Phillip Morris, R.J.
    Reynolds, Brown & Williamson, and Lorillard, seeking reimburse-
    ment for healthcare expenditures made by those states on behalf of
    citizens suffering from tobacco-related diseases. By 1996, 15 addi-
    tional states had filed similar suits. Although the States’ respective
    complaints varied, they shared a common theme, alleging that the
    major tobacco companies (1) had misled and deceived the public by
    suppressing internal research about the risks and addictive properties
    of cigarettes, (2) had committed fraud and had engaged in racketeer-
    ing activity through their efforts to disseminate false statements about
    the addictive nature of nicotine and the adverse health effects of
    smoking, and (3) had violated antitrust laws by, among other things,
    conspiring to suppress the development and marketing of safer ciga-
    rettes.
    By 1997, after several more States had filed similar lawsuits, the
    major tobacco manufacturers negotiated with a group of State Attor-
    neys General to reach a comprehensive nationwide settlement of the
    claims. The settlement, which was known as "the Tobacco Resolu-
    tion," was contingent on congressional approval. Accordingly, federal
    legislation to implement the Tobacco Resolution was introduced in
    the Senate in November 1997. The major tobacco manufacturers,
    however, withdrew their support of this legislation when it appeared
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                     5
    that the legislation would require them to pay more money and accept
    greater regulatory and marketing restrictions than they had agreed to
    in the Tobacco Resolution. Thus, the legislation was never enacted.
    In the meantime, the major tobacco companies reached individual
    settlements with Mississippi, Florida, Texas, and Minnesota. And,
    upon failure of the Tobacco Resolution, several other State Attorneys
    General initiated negotiations with two of the tobacco companies on
    a new multi-state settlement. On November 16, 1998, a group of State
    Attorneys General and the major tobacco manufacturers reached an
    agreement called the "Master Settlement Agreement." This agreement
    permitted nonsettling States to participate if they acted within seven
    days.
    The Commonwealth of Virginia, which had not participated in the
    original settlement discussions, decided to join the Master Settlement
    Agreement and, for that purpose, commenced an action in State court
    against Brown & Williamson, Liggett Group, Inc., Lorillard, Phillip
    Morris, R.J. Reynolds, and United States Tobacco Company on
    December 23, 1998. In its complaint, Virginia alleged that it spends
    millions of dollars each year to pay healthcare costs caused by
    tobacco-related diseases. It contended that the tobacco companies
    misrepresented the health effects of tobacco while simultaneously
    suppressing research revealing the dangers of tobacco products. The
    complaint also asserted that the defendants acted in concert to sup-
    press research and preserve their markets. Finally, it alleged that the
    companies specifically targeted youth in their advertisements and
    marketing campaigns "to induce such persons to start using tobacco
    products and increase [the manufacturers’] sales of tobacco products."
    The complaint alleged violations of the Virginia Antitrust Act, the
    Virginia Consumer Protection Act, and claims for unjust enrichment
    and restitution, and sought declaratory relief, injunctive relief, restitu-
    tion, damages, costs, and attorneys fees.
    After filing its complaint, Virginia, along with the other 45 states
    that had not already settled with the major tobacco companies, the
    District of Columbia, and 5 territories, agreed to sign on to the Master
    Settlement Agreement. Virginia’s litigation in State court was accord-
    ingly terminated by a consent decree and final judgment, dated Febru-
    ary 23, 1999, providing that "the [Master Settlement Agreement] set
    6                   STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    forth therein, and the establishment of the escrow provided for therein
    are hereby approved in all respects, and all claims are hereby dis-
    missed with prejudice as provided therein." Star Scientific was not
    named a defendant in that action and did not participate in the Master
    Settlement Agreement.
    Under the Master Settlement Agreement, the States released the
    participating tobacco manufacturers from all claims for past conduct
    based on the sale, use, and marketing of tobacco products. They also
    released future monetary claims arising out of exposure to tobacco
    products, including future claims for reimbursement of healthcare
    costs allegedly associated with the use of or exposure to tobacco
    products.
    In return, the participating tobacco manufacturers agreed to con-
    duct restrictions and to annual payments to the States. Among the
    conduct restrictions were agreements (1) to refrain from targeting
    youth in the advertising and marketing of tobacco products; (2) to
    refrain from using cartoon characters to promote cigarette sales; (3)
    to limit tobacco brand-name sponsorships of athletic and other events;
    (4) to refrain from lobbying Congress to preempt or diminish the
    States’ rights under the Master Settlement Agreement or to advocate
    that settlement proceeds under the Master Settlement Agreement be
    used for programs other than those related to tobacco or health; (5)
    to dissolve the Tobacco Institute, the Council for Tobacco Research,
    and the Center for Indoor Air Research; and (6) to refrain from sup-
    pressing research relating to smoking and health and misrepresenting
    the dangers of using tobacco products. The participating manufactur-
    ers also agreed to make annual payments "in perpetuity" for the dam-
    ages caused to the States. It is estimated that through these payments,
    the States will receive more than $200 billion through 2025, of which
    Virginia will receive 2.045% or approximately $4.1 billion. Finally,
    the participating manufacturers agreed to pay the States’ costs and
    attorneys fees.
    The Master Settlement Agreement permits other tobacco compa-
    nies to participate in the benefits of the agreement as "Subsequent
    Participating Manufacturers." Subsequent Participating Manufacturers
    are not required to make any payments under the Master Settlement
    Agreement unless their share of the national cigarette market exceeds
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                    7
    the greater of their 1998 market share or 125% of their 1997 market
    share. Any payments that would be required would be tied to the Sub-
    sequent Participating Manufacturers’ market shares.
    Because of a concern that manufacturers participating in the Master
    Settlement Agreement might suffer a competitive disadvantage when
    compared to nonparticipating manufacturers and that this disadvan-
    tage could affect the participating manufacturers’ ability to make the
    settlement payments, the Master Settlement Agreement includes pro-
    visions to protect the market shares and profitability of the participat-
    ing manufacturers. Thus, one provision of the Master Settlement
    Agreement allows for participating manufacturers to reduce their
    damage payments if they lose market share during a given year, as
    determined by the "Firm," a group of economic consultants desig-
    nated under procedures established in the Master Settlement Agree-
    ment. In addition, the Master Settlement Agreement requires the
    States to enact a qualifying statute that "effectively and fully neutral-
    izes the cost disadvantages that the Participating Manufacturers expe-
    rience vis-a-vis Non-Participating Manufacturers within such Settling
    State[s] as a result of the provisions of this Agreement." If a State
    does not enact and "diligently enforce[ ]" a qualifying statute, it can
    lose future payments under the Master Settlement Agreement.
    Virginia enacted a qualifying statute in March 1999 in a form sub-
    stantially similar to the model qualifying statute included in the Mas-
    ter Settlement Agreement. See 
    Va. Code Ann. §§ 3.1-336.1
     & 3.1-
    336.2. Virginia’s qualifying statute provides that any tobacco manu-
    facturer "selling cigarettes to consumers within the Commonwealth,"
    whether directly or indirectly, shall (1) become a participating manu-
    facturer and sign the Master Settlement Agreement, or (2) place into
    an escrow fund an amount determined by the number of cigarettes
    that the nonparticipating manufacturer sells in Virginia. The amount
    ranges from slightly less than one cent per cigarette in 1999 to almost
    two cents per cigarette in the year 2007 and thereafter, adjusted for
    inflation. 
    Id.
     § 3.1-336.2.A.2. Any nonparticipating tobacco manufac-
    turer failing to comply with the duties imposed by the qualifying stat-
    ute becomes subject to a civil fine and ultimately to loss of the
    privilege of selling cigarettes to consumers in Virginia. Id. § 3.1-
    336.2.C.
    8                   STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    The escrow fund established by the statute is to be used to pay any
    judgment or settlement in a lawsuit brought by Virginia to recover on
    a claim (of the kind released in the Master Settlement Agreement)
    against a nonparticipating manufacturer. Otherwise, the escrow funds
    are returned to the nonparticipating manufacturer either annually to
    the extent that they exceed what that manufacturer would have paid
    had it participated under the Master Settlement Agreement or com-
    pletely after 25 years. In the interim, all interest earned on the escrow
    account is paid to the manufacturer. 
    Va. Code Ann. § 3.1-336.2
    .B.
    Star Scientific, a "technology-oriented" tobacco company that
    focuses on developing tobacco-processing technology to reduce cer-
    tain cancer-causing toxins in tobacco leaf and tobacco smoke, began
    operations in 1990. It did not participate in the Master Settlement
    Agreement because of the financial burden of the required payments.
    The company estimated that under the agreement, it would have to
    pay approximately $19.8 million during 2000 and more thereafter. It
    asserts that it never engaged in the misconduct alleged against the
    major manufacturers by the States, and it was never sued by the
    States. Accordingly, Star Scientific elected — albeit under duress —
    to comport with the requirements of the qualifying statutes. It depos-
    ited approximately $11.6 million in escrow in April 2000, approxi-
    mately $409,000 of which was attributable to the sale of cigarettes in
    Virginia under Virginia’s qualifying statute.
    Because of the substantial payments required by the States’ various
    qualifying statutes, Star Scientific commenced this action, seeking to
    have Virginia’s qualifying statute declared unconstitutional and
    enjoined. It alleged in its complaint that the statute deprives Star Sci-
    entific of its rights under the Due Process, Equal Protection, Com-
    merce, and Takings Clauses of the United States Constitution. It also
    challenged the Master Settlement Agreement, arguing that the agree-
    ment is an unconstitutional interstate compact because it has not
    received congressional authorization, as required by the Compact
    Clause of Article I, § 10 of the Constitution.
    On Virginia’s motion, made under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    12(b)(6), the district court dismissed Star Scientific’s complaint. The
    court ruled that Star Scientific lacked standing to challenge the Master
    Settlement Agreement under the Compact Clause because Star Scien-
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                     9
    tific could not allege an injury that was "concrete and particularized,"
    nor could it show any legal prejudice caused by the Master Settlement
    Agreement. The court recognized that Star Scientific had standing to
    challenge Virginia’s qualifying statute, but it dismissed all of Star
    Scientific’s constitutional challenges to the statute for failure to state
    a claim on which relief could be granted.
    From the district court’s judgment dismissing the complaint, Star
    Scientific filed this appeal. Star Scientific did not, however, appeal
    the district court’s ruling on its Takings Clause claim.
    II
    Star Scientific contends first that Virginia’s qualifying statute —
    
    Va. Code Ann. §§ 3.1-336.1
     & 3.1-336.2 — violates its rights under
    the Due Process Clause. It argues that the statute unconstitutionally
    aims effectively to neutralize the economic impact of the Master Set-
    tlement Agreement on the participating manufacturers by placing
    equivalent financial burdens on the nonparticipating manufacturers,
    who are competitors of the participating manufacturers. The statute
    accomplishes this end, they argue, by depriving nonparticipating com-
    petitors, such as Star Scientific, of their property for 25 years either
    to force them to sign the Master Settlement Agreement or to impose
    on them a competitive disadvantage that they otherwise would not
    have suffered because they engaged in no wrongdoing.
    Star Scientific focuses on two legislative means which it asserts are
    illegal. First, it contends that the State deprives Star Scientific of its
    property without due process of law by forcing it to pay its funds into
    an escrow account for 25 years, citing to Eastern Enterprises v. Apfel,
    
    524 U.S. 498
    , 547 (1988) (Kennedy, J., concurring in judgment and
    dissenting in part); 
    id. at 556-57
     (Breyer, J., dissenting); North Ga.
    Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem, Inc., 
    419 U.S. 601
    , 606 (1975). Second,
    it contends that Virginia seeks to compel it to sign an agreement set-
    tling a case to which it was not a party and for which it could not be
    made a party. Star Scientific contends that in an effort to force non-
    signing parties to join the Master Settlement Agreement, Virginia dis-
    advantages nonparticipating manufacturers such as Star Scientific
    because their payments in escrow are not tax deductible. It asserts that
    this purpose is impermissible because it is unconstitutional for "an
    10                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    agent of the State to pursue a course of action whose objective is to
    penalize a person’s reliance on his legal rights" (quoting United States
    v. Goodwin, 
    457 U.S. 368
    , 372 n.4 (1982) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted)).
    In response, Virginia argues that the qualifying statute is designed
    to protect the physical and fiscal health and welfare of the Common-
    wealth and thus is a constitutionally sound exercise of the State’s
    police powers. The Commonwealth asserts that the statute serves the
    expressly stated legitimate purpose of providing a source of recovery
    for the smoking-related healthcare costs that it will inevitably be
    forced to bear. It concludes that, under rational basis review, the exis-
    tence of this legitimate purpose ends the due process inquiry. The dis-
    trict court agreed with the Commonwealth and dismissed Star
    Scientific’s due process claim.
    "In reviewing a district court’s order dismissing a complaint under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for plaintiff’s ‘failure to
    state a claim upon which relief can be granted,’ we determine de novo
    whether the complaint, under the facts alleged and under any facts
    that could be proved in support of the complaint, is legally sufficient."
    Eastern Shore Mkts., Inc. v. J.D. Assoc. Ltd. Partnership, 
    213 F.3d 175
    , 180 (4th Cir. 2000).
    The Due Process Clause includes a substantive component that
    provides some protection against economic legislation interfering
    with property interests. See, e.g., Concrete Pipe & Prods. of Cal., Inc.
    v. Constr. Laborers Pension Trust for So. Cal., 
    508 U.S. 602
    , 636-37
    (1993); Usery v. Turner Elkhorn Mining Co., 
    428 U.S. 1
    , 14-15
    (1976). This protection, however, is severely limited. The Supreme
    Court has long recognized that "[t]he day is gone when this Court
    uses the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to strike
    down state laws, regulatory of business and industry conditions,
    because they may be unwise, improvident, or out of harmony with a
    particular school of thought." Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla., 
    348 U.S. 483
    , 488 (1955); see also Ferguson v. Skrupa, 
    372 U.S. 726
    , 730
    (1963) ("We have returned to the original constitutional proposition
    that courts do not substitute their social and economic beliefs for the
    judgment of legislative bodies, who are elected to pass laws").
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                   11
    To comport with the limited scope of substantive due process pro-
    tection, economic legislation need only be rationally related to a legit-
    imate government interest. See, e.g., Concrete Pipe, 
    508 U.S. at 637
    ;
    Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Environmental Study Group, 
    438 U.S. 59
    , 84 (1978); Holland v. Keenan Trucking Co., 
    102 F.3d 736
    , 740
    (4th Cir. 1996) ("If a piece of economic legislation ‘is supported by
    a legitimate legislative purpose furthered by [a] rational means, judg-
    ments about the wisdom of such legislation remain within the exclu-
    sive province of the legislative and executive branches’") (quoting
    Pension Benefit Guar. Corp. v. R.A. Gray & Co., 
    467 U.S. 717
    , 729
    (1984)). Under rational basis review, therefore, "there is no need for
    mathematical precision in the fit between justification and means,"
    Concrete Pipe, 
    508 U.S. at 639
    , and "the law need not be in every
    respect logically consistent with its aims to be constitutional. It is
    enough that there is an evil at hand for correction, and that it might
    be thought that the particular legislative measure was a rational way
    to correct it." Lee Optical, 
    348 U.S. at 487-88
    . Moreover, economic
    legislation "come[s] to the Court with a presumption of constitutional-
    ity, and . . . the burden is on one complaining of a due process viola-
    tion to establish that the legislature has acted in an arbitrary and
    irrational way." Usery, 
    428 U.S. at 15
    . Thus, "[i]t is difficult to exag-
    gerate the burden" that a party must overcome to demonstrate that
    economic legislation fails rational basis review. Holland, 
    102 F.3d at 740
    .
    The courts defer to rational legislative decisionmaking with respect
    to economic legislation because the legislatures are better equipped to
    consider and evaluate the "profound and far reaching consequences"
    that such legislation may have. Duke Power Co., 
    438 U.S. at 83
    .
    Thus, the Supreme Court has admonished that "it is for the legislature,
    not the courts, to balance the advantages and disadvantages" of eco-
    nomic legislation. Lee Optical, 
    348 U.S. at 487
    . This deference is
    appropriate because the people may "resort to the polls" to protect
    themselves against abuses by the legislature. 
    Id. at 488
     (quoting Munn
    v. Illinois, 
    94 U.S. 113
    , 134 (1876)).
    Now applying this highly deferential standard, we determine
    whether Star Scientific has demonstrated that the Virginia General
    Assembly "acted in an arbitrary and irrational way" when it passed its
    qualifying statute. See Usery, 
    428 U.S. at 15
    .
    12                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    The qualifying statute at issue — 
    Va. Code Ann. §§ 3.1-336.1
     &
    3.1-336.2 — was passed with a fully articulated purpose. In the pre-
    amble to the legislation, the Virginia General Assembly stated that
    cigarette smoking "presents serious public health concerns" which in
    turn present "serious financial concerns for the Commonwealth." It
    stated that it was therefore adopting the policy that "financial burdens
    imposed on the Commonwealth by cigarette smoking be borne by
    tobacco product manufacturers rather than by the Commonwealth to
    the extent that such manufacturers either determine to enter into a set-
    tlement with the State or be found culpable by the courts." Against
    these background facts and the policy announced, the Virginia Gen-
    eral Assembly articulated the purpose of the qualifying statute, as fol-
    lows:
    Whereas, it would be contrary to the policy of the Common-
    wealth if tobacco product manufacturers who determine not
    to enter into such a settlement could use a resulting cost
    advantage to derive large, short-term profits in the years
    before liability may arise without ensuring that the Com-
    monwealth will have an eventual source of recovery from
    them if they are proven to have acted culpably. It is thus in
    the interest of the Commonwealth to require that such man-
    ufacturers establish a reserve fund to guarantee a source of
    compensation and to prevent such manufacturers from
    deriving large, short-term profits and then becoming
    judgment-proof before liability may arise.
    In short, the statute’s stated purpose is to ensure that Virginia will be
    able to recover healthcare costs from cigarette manufacturers regard-
    less of whether the manufacturer has signed on to the Master Settle-
    ment Agreement. Giving effect to this purpose falls within the State’s
    police power to promote the public health of the State and "do[es] not
    run afoul of some specific federal constitutional prohibition, or of
    some valid federal law." Ferguson, 
    372 U.S. at 730-31
     (quoting Lin-
    coln Fed. Labor Union v. Northwestern Iron & Metal Co., 
    335 U.S. 525
    , 536 (1949)). Because the qualifying statute unquestionably has
    a legitimate purpose, the only viable remaining question is whether
    the statute is rationally related to furthering this purpose.
    The statute requires that tobacco manufacturers who have not
    signed the Master Settlement Agreement place funds in escrow in
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                    13
    proportion to the number of cigarettes that they sell in Virginia,
    directly or through intermediaries. The funds are held to secure any
    claim by the Commonwealth against the manufacturer for health-
    related claims arising from cigarette smoking. While we recognize the
    financial burden that such payments might create for any given ciga-
    rette manufacturer — a burden represented by the loss of use of sig-
    nificant amounts of money for 25 years — we note that the State
    surely could properly accomplish the same end by enacting a more
    financially burdensome form of legislation, such as an act imposing
    a tax on cigarette manufacturers but giving a tax credit to those who
    sign the Master Settlement Agreement. Under the escrow arrange-
    ment, the manufacturer receives interest currently on the funds in the
    escrow account and the full principal not used to pay judgments after
    25 years. This mechanism is rationally related to the stated purpose
    of the statute, and beyond that we must leave the weighing of interests
    and the wisdom of the legislation to the legislature. See Ferguson,
    
    372 U.S. at 731
     (recognizing the "social utility" of debt adjusting, but
    nonetheless upholding a law that allowed only lawyers to engage in
    debt adjusting and, therefore, put out of business nonlawyer debt
    adjusters). Stated differently, because the creation of the escrow
    account is rationally related to Virginia’s legitimate purpose of ensur-
    ing that it can recover future judgments against nonparticipating
    tobacco manufacturers, we defer to the legislature’s judgment that the
    qualifying statute is the best way of dealing with the possibility of
    culpable manufacturers becoming judgment proof in the future. See
    Duke Power, 
    438 U.S. at 83-84
     (noting that the fact that the legisla-
    tion has "profound and far-reaching consequences . . . provides all the
    more reason for this Court to defer to the congressional judgment
    unless it is demonstrably arbitrary or irrational").
    Star Scientific’s challenge to the qualifying statute is based on a
    rejection of the statute’s articulated purpose. It would rather infer that
    the statute was enacted to coerce cigarette manufacturers to sign on
    to the Master Settlement Agreement. This argument ignores the fact
    that even if we were to reject the State’s articulated purpose for enact-
    ing the statute, we would then need only determine that the legislation
    has some conceivable purpose that is not prohibited by the Constitu-
    tion. See Lee Optical, 
    348 U.S. at 487
     (considering various purposes
    on which the legislature "might" have based the legislation at issue);
    see also Minnesota v. Cloverleaf Creamery Co., 
    449 U.S. 456
    , 463
    14                   STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    n.7 (1981) (noting that, in equal protection analysis, the "Court will
    assume that the objectives articulated by the legislature are actual pur-
    poses of the statute, unless an examination of the circumstances
    forces us to conclude that they ‘could not have been a goal of the leg-
    islation’" (quoting Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld, 
    420 U.S. 636
    , 648 n.16
    (1975))). Obviously, one of the conceivable purposes of the statute is
    the legitimate purpose stated by Virginia and to which the means
    adopted rationally relates. Accordingly, we agree with the district
    court that the qualifying statute does not violate the Due Process
    Clause of the United States Constitution.
    III
    Star Scientific next contends that Virginia’s qualifying statute vio-
    lates its rights under the Equal Protection Clause. It argues that the
    statute treats tobacco companies differently based on whether or not
    they joined the Master Settlement Agreement, and that this differen-
    tial treatment is not rationally related to a legitimate government pur-
    pose. Star Scientific asserts first that the statute’s purpose is to protect
    the market share of the four largest cigarette manufacturers and that
    this protectionist purpose is illegitimate. Second, it argues that even
    if the purpose of the statute is to ensure a source of recovery for
    health care costs imposed on Virginia by cigarette smoking, this pur-
    pose is not rationally fulfilled by imposing the requirements of the
    qualifying statute only on nonparticipating members.
    In response, Virginia contends that the different classifications of
    cigarette manufacturers under the qualifying statute are rationally
    related to the overall purpose of providing a source of recovery for
    healthcare costs. Just as participating manufacturers are required to
    make payments under the Master Settlement Agreement for past and
    future damages, nonparticipating members are required to put money
    into escrow which is held only for assuring that the nonparticipating
    manufacturers’ future liability is satisfied. In either case, Virginia’s
    future costs resulting from cigarette smoking are placed on the
    tobacco manufacturers who sell cigarettes in the State.
    Like the analysis used in evaluating the constitutionality of eco-
    nomic legislation under the Due Process Clause, an analysis of eco-
    nomic legislation under the Equal Protection Clause is a deferential
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                  15
    one. "In areas of social and economic policy, a statutory classification
    that neither proceeds along suspect lines nor infringes fundamental
    constitutional rights must be upheld against equal protection chal-
    lenge if there is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could
    provide a rational basis for the classification." FCC v. Beach Commu-
    nications, Inc., 
    508 U.S. 307
    , 313 (1993). Stated otherwise, a statu-
    tory classification that neither employs inherently suspect distinctions
    nor burdens the exercise of a fundamental constitutional right will be
    upheld if the classification is rationally related to a legitimate state
    interest. See, e.g., Cloverleaf Creamery, 
    449 U.S. at 461
    ; City of New
    Orleans v. Dukes, 
    427 U.S. 297
    , 303 (1976). This rational basis
    review is "a paradigm of judicial restraint." Beach Communications,
    
    508 U.S. at 314
    . Thus, "those attacking the rationality of the legisla-
    tive classification have the burden ‘to negative every conceivable
    basis which might support it.’ Moreover, . . . it is entirely irrelevant
    for constitutional purposes whether the conceived reason for the chal-
    lenged distinction actually motivated the legislature." Dukes, 
    427 U.S. at 314
     (internal citations omitted) (quoting Lehnhausen v. Lake Shore
    Auto Parts Co., 
    410 U.S. 356
    , 364 (1973)).
    Turning to whether Virginia’s qualifying statute violates the Equal
    Protection Clause, we conclude that Star Scientific has not met its
    very difficult burden. Although it is true that the qualifying statute
    creates distinctions among tobacco manufacturers based on whether
    a manufacturer signs the Master Settlement Agreement, the distinc-
    tions are rationally related to Virginia’s legitimate purpose of ensur-
    ing a source of recovery from all manufacturers for Virginia’s future
    costs related to cigarette smoking.
    For those manufacturers sued by Virginia for wrongdoing, the
    Master Settlement Agreement mandates not only strict conduct
    restrictions but also nonrefundable payments in perpetuity. Manufac-
    turers joining the agreement as Subsequent Participating Manufactur-
    ers — those manufacturers who were not sued for wrongdoing —
    while not required to make the same payments as the original partici-
    pating manufacturers, nevertheless agree to be bound by conduct
    restrictions. In contrast, nonparticipating manufacturers are subject to
    no conduct restrictions, and their payments in escrow last for only 25
    years. In addition, these manufacturers receive interest on the funds
    while they are held in escrow, and the principal is fully refundable if
    16                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    the money is not needed to pay a judgment in a tobacco-related law-
    suit. Thus, the refundability of the payments is directly related to the
    nonparticipating manufacturers’ future liability for tobacco-related
    losses.
    Thus, the distinctions between manufacturers signing the Master
    Settlement Agreement and manufacturers not signing are rationally
    related to their status vel non as defendants, their willingness to agree
    to conduct limitations, and Virginia’s need to ensure a source of
    recovery for all future tobacco-smoking related healthcare costs. All
    manufacturers thus bear responsibility in differing manners and
    degrees for limiting the State’s future liability for these costs. Those
    manufacturers who have not admitted to any wrongdoing and who do
    not wish to limit their future conduct retain the ability to manufacture
    and market their product in the manner they pursued before, but they
    essentially provide a surety bond against future liability for tobacco-
    smoking related healthcare costs.
    Under the rational basis review applicable here, we conclude that
    Virginia’s qualifying statute is constitutional. "States are accorded
    wide latitude in the regulation of their local economies under their
    police powers, and rational distinctions may be made with substan-
    tially less than mathematical exactitude." Dukes, 
    427 U.S. at 303
    ; see
    also Kimel v. Florida Bd. of Regents, 
    528 U.S. 62
    , 83 (2000) (holding
    that, under rational basis review, the Equal Protection Clause does not
    require States "to match age distinctions and the legitimate interests
    they serve with razorlike precision"). Even though the tobacco manu-
    facturers are treated differently, the differences in treatment are
    related to their different circumstances, allowing the State to accom-
    plish its legitimate purposes. "[W]e will not overturn such a statute
    unless the varying treatment of different groups or persons is so unre-
    lated to the achievement of any combination of legitimate purpose
    that we can only conclude that the legislature’s actions were irratio-
    nal." Vance v. Bradley, 
    440 U.S. 93
    , 97 (1979). This deference that
    we give Virginia’s legislative decisions recognizes that "[e]vils in the
    same field may be of different dimensions and proportions, requiring
    different remedies. Or so the legislature may think. Or the reform may
    take one step at a time, addressing itself to the phase of the problem
    which seems most acute to the legislative mind." Lee Optical, 
    348 U.S. at 489
     (internal citations omitted).
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                  17
    Star Scientific acknowledges that providing a source of recovery
    for the possible harm caused to the State treasury by cigarettes is a
    legitimate state purpose. It argues, however, that the distinction in
    Virginia’s qualifying statute between manufacturers who signed the
    Master Settlement Agreement and those who did not is not rationally
    related to this purpose or any other legitimate State purpose. It gives
    several examples.
    First, Star Scientific argues that nonparticipating manufacturers are
    actually treated more harshly under the qualifying statute than are par-
    ticipating manufacturers because nonparticipating manufacturers are
    required to pay more money and do more to assure against becoming
    judgment proof in the future than are participating manufacturers. It
    points to the fact that Subsequent Participating Manufacturers who
    signed the Master Settlement Agreement within 90 days are not obli-
    gated to pay any damages as long as their market share stays within
    specified bounds. On the other hand, Star Scientific, as a nonpartici-
    pating manufacturer, is obligated to pay a fixed amount for each ciga-
    rette sold in Virginia regardless of its market position there.
    Similarly, Star Scientific notes that the payments made by nonpar-
    ticipating members under the qualifying statute greatly exceed the
    equivalent payments made by participating manufacturers to cover
    future liability. It explains that while all of the payments made by
    nonparticipating manufacturers under the qualifying statute are used
    to pay for future harms caused to the Commonwealth, only 5% of the
    payments made by participating manufacturers go to addressing
    future harms. To support this assertion, Star Scientific refers to the
    consent decree entered in Virginia’s lawsuit against the major manu-
    facturers, which provides that Virginia has determined that 5% of the
    payments required under the Master Settlement Agreement "shall be
    apportioned and deemed attributed to the monetary payment" sought
    in its complaint.
    Star Scientific’s arguments demonstrate that Virginia’s qualifying
    statute does not treat nonparticipating manufacturers the same as it
    does manufacturers who subscribed to the Master Settlement Agree-
    ment. But the fact that manufacturers in different circumstances are
    not treated the same does not mean that the distinctions are irrational
    or so unrelated to a legitimate purpose that they must be struck down
    18                   STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    under the Equal Protection Clause. Indeed, the distinctions made by
    Virginia are rational. Virginia initially made an assessment of those
    manufacturers who contributed most to its healthcare costs from ciga-
    rette smoking, and it sued those manufacturers. Star Scientific was not
    one of those accused by the Commonwealth and, therefore, was not
    named a defendant in the litigation. That litigation was resolved
    against the major manufacturers by the Master Settlement Agreement,
    under which the manufacturers agreed not only to make payments and
    pay attorneys fees but also to restrict their conduct. They agreed to
    limit their advertising and marketing of cigarettes, to limit their lob-
    bying efforts, to disband their industrial associations, and to alter their
    research policies. These agreements are not insignificant and, indeed,
    such restrictions might not be enforceable as involuntary governmen-
    tal bans. Moreover, the payments made to the Commonwealth by the
    participating manufacturers are not refundable, nor do the manufac-
    turers receive interest on their payments.
    The nonparticipating manufacturers, on the other hand, are not
    required to limit their conduct. Their payments are refundable and
    earn interest. In addition, they are not required to pay the Common-
    wealth’s attorneys fees.
    In short, the distinction between participating manufacturers and
    nonparticipating manufacturers is rationally related to Virginia’s
    efforts to redress alleged wrongdoing and, at the same time, to assure
    a future source for covering the costs of cigarette smoking from all
    tobacco manufacturers.
    While the Master Settlement Agreement resolved the litigation
    between Virginia and the major tobacco manufacturers — those
    determined by the Commonwealth to be principally responsible for its
    losses — it also provided an incentive to other manufacturers to par-
    ticipate in the limitations on conduct that the Commonwealth felt
    were beneficial to it and the citizens of Virginia. Thus, every other
    manufacturer not sued by the Commonwealth was invited to join the
    Master Settlement Agreement as a "Subsequent Participating Manu-
    facturer." Such Subsequent Participating Manufacturers were not
    required to make payments but agreed to limit their conduct. Star Sci-
    entific was free to join the Master Settlement Agreement as a Subse-
    quent Participating Manufacturer if it concluded that this would have
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                     19
    been a better deal for it, but, apparently for business reasons, it
    elected not to participate in that capacity.
    Also, the fact that Star Scientific may end up paying relatively
    more toward future healthcare costs than participating manufacturers
    is directly related to Star Scientific’s future liability, which may be
    higher than that of participating manufacturers because it is not bound
    by any conduct restrictions. If its liability is not higher, it will receive
    its escrow payments back, with interest.
    In sum, we conclude that the distinctions drawn in Virginia’s quali-
    fying statute between tobacco manufacturers participating in the Mas-
    ter Settlement Agreement and those not participating are rationally
    related to the State’s purpose of ensuring a source of recovery from
    all cigarette manufacturers who are held liable for smoking-related
    healthcare costs. The Commonwealth’s decision to require nonpartici-
    pating manufacturers to place funds in an escrow account is not "in-
    vidious discrimination" or a "wholly arbitrary act." Dukes, 
    427 U.S. at 303-04
    . Rather, it is a rational system for assessing tobacco manu-
    facturers for the costs of cigarette smoking as well as regulating their
    conduct to the extent that they were sued and agreed to resolve that
    suit through settlement. We therefore conclude that the qualifying
    statute does not violate the Equal Protection Clause.
    IV
    Star Scientific contends that Virginia’s qualifying statute also vio-
    lates the Commerce Clause, which gives Congress the power "[t]o
    regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several
    States, and with the Indian Tribes." U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. This
    argument focuses on the aspect of the qualifying statute that assesses
    an escrow payment amount on each cigarette sold by nonparticipating
    tobacco manufacturers "within the Commonwealth, whether directly
    or through a distributor, retailer or similar intermediary or intermedi-
    aries." 
    Va. Code Ann. § 3.1-336.2
    .A (emphasis added); see also 
    id.
    § 3.1-336.1 (defining cigarette "units sold" as those sold in the Com-
    monwealth "whether directly or through a distributor, retailer or simi-
    lar intermediary or intermediaries"). More particularly, Star Scientific
    argues that the statute requires it to make payments on cigarettes sold
    by it to independent distributors in other states if the cigarettes are
    20                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    later sold into Virginia. It maintains that, in this manner, the qualify-
    ing statute regulates transactions beyond the Commonwealth’s bor-
    ders and excessively burdens interstate commerce.
    In response, Virginia maintains that its qualifying statutes regulate
    only the sale of cigarettes in Virginia. It contends that any incidental
    burden placed on interstate commerce by operation of the statute is
    outweighed by Virginia’s strong interest in assuring its ability to
    recover the costs of tobacco use imposed on it by cigarette manufac-
    turers.
    The constitutional grant of authority to Congress to regulate inter-
    state commerce "has long been understood, as well, to provide ‘pro-
    tection from state legislation inimical to the national commerce [even]
    where Congress has not acted.’" Barclays Bank PLC v. Franchise Tax
    Bd. of Cal., 
    512 U.S. 298
    , 310 (1994) (quoting Southern Pac. Co. v.
    Arizona ex rel. Sullivan, 
    325 U.S. 761
    , 769 (1945)). This "negative
    command, known as the dormant Commerce Clause," prohibits States
    from legislating in ways that impede the flow of interstate commerce.
    Oklahoma Tax Comm’n v. Jefferson Lines, Inc., 
    514 U.S. 175
    , 179
    (1995). The dormant Commerce Clause’s limitation on State power,
    however, "is by no means absolute. In the absence of conflicting fed-
    eral legislation the States retain authority under their general police
    powers to regulate matters of ‘legitimate local concern,’ even though
    interstate commerce may be affected." Lewis v. BT Investment Mgrs.,
    Inc., 
    447 U.S. 27
    , 36 (1980).
    To determine whether a State statute violates the dormant Com-
    merce Clause, we conduct a two-tiered analysis. Brown-Forman Dis-
    tillers Corp. v. New York State Liquor Auth., 
    476 U.S. 573
    , 578-79
    (1986); Environmental Technology Council v. Sierra Club, 
    98 F.3d 774
    , 785 (4th Cir. 1996). "When a state statute directly regulates or
    discriminates against interstate commerce, or when its effect is to
    favor in-state economic interests over out-of-state interests," the stat-
    ute is generally struck down "without further inquiry." Brown-
    Forman, 
    476 U.S. at 579
    . Thus, for State statutes that discriminate
    against interstate commerce, we apply "a virtually per se rule of inva-
    lidity." Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 
    437 U.S. 617
    , 624 (1978); see
    also Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 
    502 U.S. 437
    , 454-55 (1992). When,
    however, a statute does not discriminate against interstate commerce
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                    21
    but rather "regulates evenhandedly and only indirectly affects inter-
    state commerce," we conduct a fuller analysis — the second tier —
    involving a balancing test. See Environmental Technology Council,
    
    98 F.3d 785
    ; see also Brown-Forman, 
    476 U.S. at 579
    . In conducting
    this second-tier analysis, we look to "whether the State’s interest is
    legitimate and whether the burden on interstate commerce clearly
    exceeds the local benefits." Brown-Forman, 
    476 U.S. at
    579 (citing
    Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 
    397 U.S. 137
    , 142 (1970)).
    Star Scientific argues first that the qualifying statute is invalid per
    se because it directly regulates commerce occurring wholly outside of
    Virginia’s boundaries. It maintains that "a State violates the Com-
    merce Clause if it attempts to regulate aspects of the stream of com-
    merce that occur upstream, outside the State’s borders." It correctly
    notes that a State may not regulate commerce occurring wholly out-
    side of its borders. See Edgar v. Mite Corp., 
    457 U.S. 624
    , 642-43
    (1982) (noting that "[t]he Commerce Clause . . . precludes the appli-
    cation of a state statute to commerce that takes place wholly outside
    of the State’s borders, whether or not the commerce has effects within
    the State"); Brown-Forman, 
    476 U.S. at 582-83
    ; Healy v. Beer Inst.,
    
    491 U.S. 324
    , 335-36 (1989). Nor may a State pass laws that have
    "the ‘practical effect’ of regulating commerce occurring wholly out-
    side the State’s borders." Healy, 
    491 U.S. at 332
    . This proposition is
    based on the common sense conclusion that "a statute that directly
    controls commerce occurring wholly outside the boundaries of a State
    exceeds the inherent limits of the enacting State’s authority," regard-
    less of the State’s legislative intent. Healy, 
    491 U.S. at 336
    . Star Sci-
    entific maintains that Virginia’s qualifying statute is analogous to the
    statutes held unconstitutional in Brown-Forman and Healy.
    In Brown-Forman, the Supreme Court struck down a provision of
    the New York Alcoholic Beverage Control Law that required liquor
    distillers to affirm that their prices were no higher than the lowest
    price at which the same product would be sold in any other state dur-
    ing the month. 
    476 U.S. at 575-76
    . The Court found that, while the
    law was addressed only to the sale of liquor in New York, "the ‘prac-
    tical effect’ of the law [was] to control liquor prices in other States"
    because "[o]nce a distiller has posted prices in New York, it is not
    free to change its prices elsewhere in the United States during the rel-
    evant month." 
    Id. at 582-83
    . Thus, the Court found the law invalid
    22                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    because "[f]orcing a merchant to seek regulatory approval in one
    State before undertaking a transaction in another directly regulates
    interstate commerce." 
    Id. at 582
    .
    In the same vein, the Court in Healy struck down the Connecticut
    Liquor Control Act which required out-of-state beer shippers to
    affirm that the prices at which their products were sold to Connecticut
    wholesalers were no higher than the prices at which those same prod-
    ucts were sold in bordering states. 
    491 U.S. at 326-27
    . The Court held
    the statute unconstitutional because it had the practical effect of con-
    trolling liquor prices in other States and interfered with the regulatory
    schemes in those States. 
    Id. at 338-39
    .
    Virginia’s qualifying statute, however, rather than aiming at or
    reacting to commerce outside of Virginia, specifically limits its appli-
    cability to the sale of cigarettes "within the Commonwealth." 
    Va. Code Ann. § 3.1-336.2
    .A; see also 
    id.
     § 3.1-336.1 (defining "units
    sold" as "individual cigarettes sold in the Commonwealth"). Thus,
    rather than regulate "upstream transactions" outside of the State, the
    Virginia qualifying statute imposes a fee only for cigarettes actually
    sold within the State. It has no effect on transactions undertaken by
    out-of-state distributors in other States.
    To the extent that the statute may affect the prices charged by out-
    of-state distributors, the effect is applicable only to prices charged on
    cigarettes sold within Virginia. The statute does not insist on price
    parity with cigarettes sold outside of the State. The statute therefore
    does not have the "practical effect" of controlling prices or transac-
    tions occurring wholly outside of the boundaries of Virginia, as was
    the case in Brown-Forman and Healy. Thus, the rule of per se invalid-
    ity does not apply to the qualifying statute.
    Star Scientific argues that in any event, Virginia’s qualifying stat-
    ute fails the balancing test applicable to State economic regulations
    that indirectly affect interstate commerce. It asserts that the burden
    that the qualifying statute places on interstate commerce clearly
    exceeds its local benefits.
    The balancing test applicable to nondiscriminatory legislation
    affecting interstate commerce was set out in Pike, 
    397 U.S. at
    142:
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                    23
    Where the statute regulates even-handedly to effectuate a
    legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate
    commerce are only incidental, it will be upheld unless the
    burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in
    relation to the putative local benefits. If a legitimate local
    purpose is found, then the question becomes one of degree.
    And the extent of the burden that will be tolerated will of
    course depend on the nature of the local interest involved,
    and on whether it could be promoted as well with a lesser
    impact on interstate activities.
    (internal citation omitted). To apply this Pike balancing test, we con-
    sider (1) the nature of the local benefits advanced by the statute; (2)
    the burden placed on interstate commerce by the statute; and (3)
    whether the burden is "clearly excessive" when weighed against these
    local benefits. 
    Id.
    As we discussed in Parts II and III, above, Virginia’s qualifying
    statute serves the legitimate state interest of ensuring that Virginia has
    a source of recovery for future smoking-related healthcare costs
    attributable to tobacco manufacturers who have not subscribed to the
    Master Settlement Agreement and who, therefore, are not already
    compensating the Commonwealth for these healthcare costs. Thus,
    the putative local benefits are both legitimate and important. We also
    conclude that the burden of the State’s economic regulation on inter-
    state commerce is minimal.
    Star Scientific argues, however, that because the escrow payments
    are imposed on cigarettes sold not only by it, but also by its distribu-
    tors, even when the distributors purchased the cigarettes outside of the
    State, Star Scientific is required to "police interstate sales or channel
    those sales into contractual forms that may be more burdensome to
    commerce." Star Scientific is, however, overstating its burden. As
    Virginia points out, distributors in Virginia are already required to
    record the number of cigarettes they stamp with the Virginia excise
    stamp and report that information to the Commonwealth. See 
    Va. Code Ann. § 58.1-1000
     et seq. Because distributors already have to
    keep track of this information, any additional burden caused by
    requiring manufacturers to obtain this information from the distribu-
    tors is minimal.
    24                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    Given the important State interest advanced by the qualifying stat-
    ute and the minimal burden placed on interstate commerce by its
    operation, we conclude that the burden on interstate commerce is not
    "clearly excessive" when compared to the putative local benefits. See
    Pike, 
    397 U.S. at 142
    . Thus, we agree with district court that the qual-
    ifying statute does not violate the Commerce Clause.
    V
    Finally, Star Scientific challenges the Master Settlement Agree-
    ment itself, contending that it violates the Compact Clause of Article
    1, § 10, of the Constitution, which provides that "no State shall, with-
    out the consent of Congress, . . . enter into any Agreement or Com-
    pact with another State." U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, cl. 3. Star Scientific
    asserts that the Master Settlement Agreement is in fact an interstate
    compact and that, because it has not been approved by Congress, the
    Agreement, as well as the qualifying statutes enacted pursuant to it,
    are invalid.
    Virginia contends that Star Scientific lacks standing to challenge
    the Master Settlement Agreement, a settlement to which it is not a
    party. It argues that because invalidating the Master Settlement
    Agreement would not release Star Scientific from its obligations
    under the qualifying statute, the purported injury that Star Scientific
    claims from having to pay into the escrow fund under the qualifying
    statute is not redressable by its challenge to the Master Settlement
    Agreement. On the merits, Virginia argues that the Compact Clause
    is, in any event, not applicable to the Master Settlement Agreement
    because the agreement does not enhance the political power of Vir-
    ginia or any other State in a way that encroaches upon the supremacy
    of the United States. In addition, Virginia asserts that Congress has
    implicitly, if not expressly, provided any consent that might be
    needed. See Cuyler v. Adams, 
    449 U.S. 433
    , 441 (1981) (recognizing
    implied consent given in a statute enacted prior to the formation of
    an interstate compact); Virginia v. Tennessee, 
    148 U.S. 503
    , 521-22
    (1893) (recognizing implied consent to a Border Agreement by treat-
    ing Border as valid for subsequent revenue, electoral, and judicial
    purposes); Greene v. Biddle, 21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 1, 86-87 (1823) (rec-
    ognizing implied consent given by admitting State into the Union). In
    support of this argument, Virginia points to Congress’ amendment to
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                    25
    the Medicaid statute in 1991, in which Congress authorized the States
    to use Master Settlement Agreement funds "for any expenditures
    determined appropriate." Specifically, the amendment provided that
    federal rules governing health overpayments "shall not apply to any
    amount recovered or paid to a State as part of the comprehensive set-
    tlement of November 1998 between manufacturers of tobacco prod-
    ucts . . . and State Attorneys General." 42 U.S.C. § 1396b(d)(3)(B)(i-
    ii) (Supp. V 1999).
    The district court agreed with Virginia and did not reach the merits
    of the Compact Clause argument. We will address both the standing
    and the merits issues, seriatim.
    A
    Article III of the Constitution limits the jurisdiction of federal
    courts to actual "cases" or "controversies." U.S. Const. art. III, § 2.
    Thus, it is a jurisdictional requirement that a person challenging a
    government action be a party to a live case or controversy. This stand-
    ing requirement "is an essential and unchanging part of the case-or-
    controversy requirement of Article III." Lujan v. Defenders of Wild-
    life, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992) (citing Allen v. Wright, 
    468 U.S. 737
    ,
    751 (1984)). To establish standing, a party must establish, as "the irre-
    ducible constitutional minimum," three elements: (1) that it has suf-
    fered an injury in fact that is both concrete and particularized and
    "actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical"; (2) that there is
    a causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained
    of, i.e. the injury is "fairly traceable" to the challenged action; and (3)
    that it is "likely . . . that the injury will be redressed by a favorable
    decision." Id. at 560-61 (internal quotation marks and citations omit-
    ted); Burke v. City of Charleston, 
    139 F.3d 401
    , 405 (4th Cir. 1998).
    In this case, Star Scientific contends that its payments into escrow
    pursuant to Virginia’s qualifying statute impose an actual and con-
    crete injury that is "fairly traceable" to the Master Settlement Agree-
    ment because the Master Settlement Agreement coerced the
    Commonwealth to enact the qualifying statute that causes Star Scien-
    tific’s injury. Accordingly, it argues, its injury will be redressed by a
    favorable decision invalidating the Master Settlement Agreement.
    26                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    Virginia contends, however, that instead of requiring the States to
    enact escrow statutes, the Master Settlement Agreement only encour-
    ages the enactment of such statutes. It asserts that every settling State
    retains "full freedom not to pass the ‘contemplated’ law, and a State
    that chooses not to do so remains a full party to the Master Settlement
    Agreement." If a state does not enact a qualifying statute, the tobacco
    companies remain released from liability for past and future claims
    and the States receive the benefit of the conduct restrictions imposed
    on the tobacco companies by the agreement. In addition, in certain
    peculiar circumstances a State that fails to enact a qualifying statute
    might still receive some payments.
    Star Scientific acknowledges that there is not a complete depen-
    dency between the Master Settlement Agreement and the qualifying
    statute, but it maintains it has standing to challenge the Master Settle-
    ment Agreement because the agreement is powerfully coercive. The
    Master Settlement Agreement, it argues, "provides enormous finan-
    cial incentives for the Commonwealth to adopt the Qualifying Statute
    and imposes large penalties if the statute is repealed." We agree with
    Star Scientific.
    In Bennett v. Spear, 
    520 U.S. 154
     (1997), the Supreme Court was
    presented with a similar situation and found sufficient coercion to
    form the basis for standing. In that case, the plaintiffs challenged a
    Biological Opinion issued by the Fish and Wildlife Service, claiming
    that the allocation of water required by the Opinion affected the
    amount of water available to the plaintiffs. 
    Id. at 167-68
    . The govern-
    ment argued that the harm asserted by the plaintiffs was not caused
    by the Biological Opinion because the Bureau of Reclamation was an
    intervening actor determining whether to implement the requirements
    of the Opinion. 
    Id. at 168
    . The Supreme Court rejected this argument
    and concluded that while the Bureau was "technically free to disre-
    gard the Biological Opinion . . . it [did] so at its own peril" and faced
    substantial penalties if it ignored the opinion. 
    Id. at 170
    . In these cir-
    cumstances, the Court concluded that the plaintiffs’ injuries were
    fairly traceable to the Biological Opinion despite the intervening
    action of the Bureau of Reclamation.
    Similarly, the Master Settlement Agreement, while not technically
    requiring Virginia to enact a qualifying statute, nevertheless imposes
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                   27
    a powerful incentive for it to do so. Virginia would suffer large penal-
    ties if it failed to enact the statute. For example, if the participating
    manufacturers were to lose market share and their loss was attribut-
    able to their payments under the Master Settlement Agreement and to
    the nonparticipating manufacturers’ freedom from such payments, the
    "Firm" (the administrative body created under the Master Settlement
    Agreement) could determine that this loss was caused by Virginia’s
    failure to enact a qualifying statute and, on that basis, decrease Vir-
    ginia’s payments from the manufacturers under the agreement.
    Because Virginia could face a substantial financial burden if it were
    not to enact a qualifying statute, the Master Settlement Agreement is
    coercive in requiring the states to pass such a statute. We conclude
    that this coercion is significant and that, therefore, Star Scientific’s
    injuries may be fairly traceable to the requirements of the Master Set-
    tlement Agreement. Accordingly, we conclude that Star Scientific has
    standing to challenge the Master Settlement Agreement under the
    Compact Clause.
    B
    The Compact Clause does not require congressional approval of
    every agreement between or among States. Instead, the Supreme
    Court has held that "the proper balance between federal and state
    power with respect to compacts and agreements among states" is
    maintained by limiting application of the Compact Clause to agree-
    ments that are "directed to the formation of any combination tending
    to the increase of political power in the States, which may encroach
    upon or interfere with the just supremacy of the United States." Vir-
    ginia v. Tennessee, 
    148 U.S. 503
    , 519 (1893); see also Northeast Ban-
    corp., Inc. v. Board of Governors of the Fed. Res. Sys., 
    472 U.S. 159
    ,
    175-76 (1985); United States Steel Corp. v. Multi-State Tax Comm’n,
    
    434 U.S. 452
    , 471 (1978); New Hampshire v. Maine, 
    426 U.S. 363
    ,
    369 (1975).
    The Master Settlement Agreement principally operates vertically
    between each State and the signatory tobacco companies, providing
    releases from liability to the tobacco companies in exchange for con-
    duct restrictions and payments. But in administering the amount of
    payments under the Master Settlement Agreement and their relation-
    ship to the escrow accounts established under qualifying statutes, the
    28                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    Master Settlement Agreement creates an administrative body — the
    Firm, consisting of economic consultants — to determine compliance
    with the Master Settlement Agreement. To the extent that the States
    agree on the creation of this single administrative body and its func-
    tioning, there is a horizontal aspect to the Master Settlement Agree-
    ment that establishes a compact among the States, implicating the
    Compact Clause.
    Although the Master Settlement Agreement implicates the Com-
    pact Clause, we see no reason to conclude that it encroaches on fed-
    eral power. In Multi-State Tax Commission, the Supreme Court
    upheld a compact resulting in reciprocal State legislation and estab-
    lishing an administrative body to coordinate State taxation of certain
    entities. 
    434 U.S. at 472-73
    . The Court noted that the compact might
    result in an increase in bargaining power of the member States with
    respect to the corporations subject to their taxing jurisdictions, but it
    found such an increase in power to be acceptable because "the test is
    whether the Compact enhances state power quoad the National Gov-
    ernment." 
    Id. at 473
    . Similarly, the Master Settlement Agreement may
    result in an increase in bargaining power of the States vis-a-vis the
    tobacco manufacturers, but this increase in power does not interfere
    with federal supremacy because the Master Settlement Agreement
    "does not purport to authorize the member States to exercise any pow-
    ers they could not exercise in its absence." Multi-State Tax Comm’n,
    
    434 U.S. at 473
    .
    In addition, the Master Settlement Agreement does not derogate
    from the power of the federal government to regulate tobacco. Sec-
    tions X and XVIII(a) of the agreement specifically anticipate that
    Congress may, in the future, pass laws regulating tobacco and pro-
    vides for adjustments of the Master Settlement Agreement’s terms if
    that occurs. Similarly, Star Scientific’s argument that the Master Set-
    tlement Agreement derogates from the federal bankruptcy policy is
    without merit. Again, Section XVIII(w)(1)(c) of the Master Settle-
    ment Agreement, dealing with bankruptcy, specifically states that the
    provision is only enforceable if consistent with the Bankruptcy Code.
    In sum, we conclude that the Master Settlement Agreement does
    not increase the power of the States at the expense of federal suprem-
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                   29
    acy and that, therefore, it is not an interstate compact requiring con-
    gressional approval under the Compact Clause.
    VI
    Today, it is generally recognized that "tobacco use, particularly
    among children and adolescents, poses perhaps the single most signif-
    icant threat to public health in the United States." Lorillard Tobacco
    Co. v. Reilly, 
    121 S. Ct. 2404
    , 2430 (2001) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). The costs attributable to this major public
    health issue are borne by various constituencies, including the States.
    Through years of lawsuits and settlement agreements, the States and
    the major tobacco companies have finally reached an agreement
    broadly addressing the public health threat, and this agreement, if it
    is to be effective, necessarily has implications beyond the parties,
    reaching nonsettling tobacco companies, such as Star Scientific.
    Regardless of Star Scientific’s innocence in any alleged wrongdo-
    ing — allegations that made the Master Settlement Agreement with
    the major manufacturers possible — Star Scientific remains a tobacco
    company whose products continue to threaten the public health. For
    that reason alone, its inclusion in a legislative scheme to establish
    financial responsibility for this public health issue is not inherently
    irrational. Indeed, it falls squarely within the States’ police power to
    promote the public health, safety, welfare, and morals of the State.
    See Berman v. Parker, 
    348 U.S. 26
    , 32 (1954).
    Star Scientific might rightly claim innocence as to past wrongdoing
    and might even be justified in claiming credit for its efforts to educate
    would-be smokers about the adverse effects of smoking and for its
    efforts to reduce, through research, cancer-causing toxins in ciga-
    rettes. But it cannot deny that it is a cigarette manufacturer whose
    products will continue to threaten the public health. While it does not
    suggest any such denial, it nevertheless persists in its particular claim
    that the entire arrangement created by the Master Settlement Agree-
    ment and qualifying statutes effects an improper and unjust transfer
    of large amounts of money from cigarette manufacturers to settling
    States while openly protecting the profits of the alleged wrongdoers.
    It characterizes this claim as follows:
    30                  STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES
    Such naked rent-seeking legislation to protect the position of
    politically favored actors usually comes cloaked in the
    sheep’s clothing of some legitimate state purpose to which
    the regulation bears a plausible relation. And in the dim
    light of rational basis review, this often-transparent disguise
    is good enough.
    "But this wolf comes as a wolf," Morrison v. Olson, 
    487 U.S. 654
    , 699 (1988) (Scalia, J. dissenting), because the
    MSA states that the "Qualifying Statute" must "effectively
    and fully neutralize[ ] the cost disadvantages that the Partici-
    pating Manufacturers experience vis-a-vis Non-Participating
    Manufacturers within such Settling State as a result of the
    provisions of this Agreement." Whether viewed under the
    lens of due process or equal protection, that purpose is con-
    stitutionally impermissible. The Constitution simply does
    not allow a State to protect its judgment creditors by impos-
    ing financial burdens on their competitors who have not
    been found liable to the State.
    This viewpoint, however, fails to account fully for the larger continu-
    ing problem to which Star Scientific necessarily and unquestionably
    contributes. It also fails to recognize the justifications for the mean-
    ingful distinctions in the treatment of the major tobacco manufactur-
    ers, who were targeted with alleged wrongdoing, and the smaller
    tobacco companies, such as Star Scientific, who were not, but yet still
    threatened the public health.
    Not only are the major tobacco manufacturers’ payments of over
    $200 billion irrevocable and without interest, their conduct in associ-
    ating with each other, in advertising, in marketing, and in researching
    tobacco products is permanently restricted. These manufacturers also
    have agreed to reimburse the States for their attorneys fees. Even
    though nonparticipating tobacco manufacturers, such as Star Scien-
    tific, are required to pay comparable amounts into an escrow fund,
    such payments earn interest for the manufacturer, and the principal is
    returned after 25 years if the company does not incur tobacco-related
    liability. If Star Scientific had found these differences in treatment
    unfair, it was free to participate in the Master Settlement Agreement
    as a Subsequent Participating Manufacturer. While this choice may
    STAR SCIENTIFIC, INC. v. BEALES                   31
    not have been an ideal one for Star Scientific and either option would
    surely burden its operations, the effect of either option is no different
    than the effect of a tax that might have been imposed to pay for the
    public health costs. When viewed in this larger context, Star Scientif-
    ic’s claim of irrationality and impermissible discrimination by Vir-
    ginia cannot be sustained.
    For the reasons we have given, we reject Star Scientific’s constitu-
    tional challenge to the qualifying statute based on the Due Process,
    Equal Protection, and Commerce Clauses of the United States Consti-
    tution, and we likewise reject its challenge to the Master Settlement
    Agreement under the Compact Clause. The judgment of the district
    court is accordingly
    AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 01-1502

Citation Numbers: 278 F.3d 339

Filed Date: 1/22/2002

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (39)

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michael-h-holland-marty-d-hudson-thomas-f-connors-robert-t-wallace-as , 102 F.3d 736 ( 1996 )

Vance v. Bradley , 99 S. Ct. 939 ( 1979 )

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Virginia v. Tennessee , 13 S. Ct. 728 ( 1893 )

Morrison v. Olson , 108 S. Ct. 2597 ( 1988 )

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