Chance Management v. State of SD , 97 F.3d 1107 ( 1996 )


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  •                                 _____________
    No. 95-1665
    _____________
    Chance Management, Inc., a            *
    South Dakota corporation;             *
    William A. Sanders, a                 *
    Wyoming resident,                     *
    *
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,         *   Appeal from the United States
    *   District Court for the
    v.                               *   District of South Dakota.
    *
    State of South Dakota; Mark W.       *
    Barnett, in his official              *
    capacity as Attorney General of       *
    South Dakota; South Dakota            *
    Lottery; Susan Walker, in her         *
    official capacity as Executive        *
    Director of the South Dakota          *
    Lottery; H. I. King, in his           *
    official capacity as member of        *
    the South Dakota Lottery              *
    Commission; Beverly McCracken,        *
    in her official capacity as           *
    member of the South Dakota            *
    Lottery Commission; Elaine            *
    Emery, in her official capacity       *
    as member of the South Dakota         *
    Lottery Commission; Don Bender,       *
    in his official capacity as           *
    member of the South Dakota            *
    Lottery Commission; Burdette          *
    Solum, in her official capacity       *
    as member of the South Dakota         *
    Lottery Commission; John E.           *
    Carmody, Sr., in his official         *
    capacity as member of the South       *
    Dakota Lottery Commission,            *
    *
    Defendants - Appellees.          *
    _____________
    Submitted:    November 17, 1995
    Filed: October 10, 1996
    _____________
    Before HANSEN, LAY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    _____________
    HANSEN, Circuit Judge.
    A corporation may obtain a license as a video lottery machine
    operator for the South Dakota Lottery only if residents of South Dakota
    hold the majority ownership interest in the corporation.      S.D. Codified
    Laws Ann. § 42-7A-43 (Supp. 1995).     Chance Management, Inc., and William
    A. Sanders filed this suit, challenging the constitutionality of the
    residency requirement under the Commerce Clause, the Equal Protection
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the Privileges and Immunities
    Clause.   The district court1 granted the defendants summary judgment.   The
    court concluded that Commerce Clause restrictions do not apply to the
    statute because the state of South Dakota is acting as a market participant
    in the video lottery business.     The court further held that the statute
    does not violate the Equal Protection Clause and that the plaintiffs have
    no standing to assert the Privileges and Immunities Clause challenge.    The
    plaintiffs appeal.   We affirm.
    I.
    In South Dakota, various forms of gambling are legal.         See S.D.
    Codified Laws Ann. §§    42-7-47 to -106 (1991 & Supp. 1996) (horse and dog
    racing); 
    id. §§ 42-7A-1
    to -55 (South Dakota Lottery); 
    id. §§ 4242-7B-1
    to
    -62 (card games and slot machines).   South Dakota owns and operates one of
    the gaming enterprises in South Dakota, the South Dakota Lottery, which is
    a video lottery business.   Video lottery consists of games of chance played
    on a computer-controlled video machine, simulating the games of poker,
    blackjack, keno, and bingo.    South Dakota operates its video
    1
    The Honorable John B. Jones, United States District Judge for
    the District of South Dakota.
    2
    lottery business in accordance with Article III, Section 25 of the South
    Dakota Constitution, which, as amended in 1994,2 reads as follows:
    The Legislature shall not authorize any game of . . . lottery
    . . . . However, it shall be lawful for the Legislature to
    authorize by law, a state lottery or video games of chance, or
    both, which are regulated by the state of South Dakota, either
    separately by the state or jointly with one or more states, and
    which are owned and operated by the state of South Dakota,
    either separately by the state or jointly with one or more
    states or persons, provided any such video games of chance
    shall not directly dispense coins or tokens.
    Chapter 42-7A of the South Dakota Codified Laws establishes the
    state's video lottery under the direction of an independent state agency,
    the South Dakota Lottery Commission (the Commission).     S.D. Codified Laws
    Ann. § 42-7A-2 (Supp. 1995).   This chapter creates a detailed statutory
    scheme governing South Dakota's video lottery business.   See 
    id. § 42-7A-1
    to -55.   An executive director administers the lottery pursuant to the
    provisions of Chapter 42-7A, 
    id. § 42-7A-2,
    and under the rules and
    regulations promulgated by the Commission, 
    id. § 42-7A-21.
    South Dakota controls and operates its video lottery business in
    large part through a central computer system, which is located in the main
    office of the South Dakota Lottery in Pierre, South Dakota.     Although the
    state does not own the video machines on which the games of chance are
    played or the modems attached to the
    2
    The South Dakota Lottery began operating in October 1989. In
    1994, the Supreme Court of South Dakota declared that the state was
    not actually running a lottery, but games of chance, in violation
    of the South Dakota Constitution. Poppen v. Walker, 
    520 N.W.2d 238
    (S.D. 1994). The South Dakota Legislature responded by passing a
    joint resolution amending the South Dakota Constitution to allow
    the South Dakota Lottery. The voters of South Dakota approved the
    proposed constitutional amendment, and in November 1994, under the
    amended Article III, Section 25 of the South Dakota Constitution,
    video lottery operations again commenced.
    3
    machines, it owns the dominant software programs that operate the machines.
    asable, Programmable, Read Only Memory (EPROM) chips
    in the video machines, without which the machine
    EPROM chips contain the data that protects and secures the system fro
    invasion by outside influences.       In
    state spent two million dollars on the central computer system, personnel,
    Video lottery machine operators (operators) own the individual video
    and are responsible for their operation and maintenance.                (J.A.
    es or associated equipment
    for      thorized play in licensed video lottery establishments in South
    a, including restaurants, bars, lounges, or lodging establishment
    licensed to sell alcoholic beverages on the premises.               S.D. Codified Laws
    §§ 42-7A-1(6) (defining "licensed establishment"), -1(17) (defining
    e operator").     The state bills the operators for its
    portion                                              by electronically sweeping the
    operators' bank accounts.      S.D. Admin. R. 48:02:
    share                                                                                 t
    dec        this case; the South Dakota Legislature has since increased the
    All video lottery machine manufacturers, distributors, and operators
    obtain a license from the executive director of the South Dakot
    Lottery in order to do business with the Lottery.              S.D. Codified Laws Ann.
    42-7A-41.      Before issuing a license to any of these parties, the state
    a background investigation to ascertain whether the applicant
    ies   for   a   license.              §§   42-7A-43    (investigation),     -13
    ifications), -14 (ineligible persons);                        S.D. Admin. R.
    02:02:01 (additional qualification requirements for licensure).
    corporate applicant cannot obtain a license until each person who has the
    4
    majority       of   the   corporation's     board    of   directors   has    passed    the
    requirements        set   out    for   individual    applicants.      S.D.    Admin.    R.
    48:02:02:02.
    In addition to passing the background investigation, a person must
    be a resident of South Dakota to obtain a video lottery machine operator's
    license.       S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 42-7A-43.           If the party seeking an
    operator's license is a corporation, a majority of the ownership interest
    in the corporation must be held by South Dakota residents in order to
    qualify for a license.          
    Id. Plaintiff Chance
    Management, Inc., is a corporation organized under
    the laws of the state of South Dakota and is owned by two persons.
    Plaintiff William A. Sanders, a resident of Wyoming, owns the majority
    (51%) of the stock in Chance Management, with the remaining shares (49%)
    owned by a South Dakota resident.            Chance Management applied for a video
    lottery operator's license but was turned down because its majority
    shareholder failed to meet the residency requirement under § 42-7A-43.
    Chance Management and Sanders filed this suit against the state of
    South Dakota, the executive director of the state lottery, and various
    members of the state Lottery Commission.                  Plaintiffs challenged the
    constitutionality of the residency requirement under the Commerce Clause,
    the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the Privileges
    and Immunities Clause.          Both sides filed motions for summary judgment.         The
    district court granted the defendants' motion, holding that the statute
    does not run afoul of either the Commerce Clause or the Equal Protection
    Clause.     The court further held that the plaintiffs lacked standing to
    mount    the    Privileges      and    Immunities   Clause   challenge.      See   Chance
    Management, Inc. v. South Dakota, 
    876 F. Supp. 209
    , 211-13 (D.S.D. 1995).
    Chance Management and Sanders appeal.
    5
    II.
    review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo
    Independent                                            , 
    82 F.3d 791
    , 795 (8th Cir.
    Summary judgment is appropriate when the evidence, viewed in the
    most favorable to the nonmoving party, shows there is no genuine
    of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    of law.       ; Cotto Waxo Co. v. Williams, 
    46 F.3d 790
    , 792 (8th Cir.
    1995).
    A.   Commerce Clause Challenge
    Under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution of the United States,
    "Congress shall have Power . . . To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations,
    and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes . . . ."               U.S.
    Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3.            This clause acts not only as an affirmative
    grant of regulatory power to Congress, but also "as a restriction on
    permissible state regulation."            Hughes v. Oklahoma, 
    441 U.S. 322
    , 326
    (1979).     "This `negative' or `dormant' aspect of the Commerce Clause
    prohibits economic protectionism -- that is, regulatory measures designed
    to   benefit       in-state    economic    interests   by   burdening   out-of-state
    competitors."      
    Charities, 82 F.3d at 798
    (citing New Energy Co. of Indiana
    v. Limbach, 
    486 U.S. 269
    , 273 (1988)).
    Because the power granted to Congress under the Commerce Clause is
    the power to "regulate Commerce . . . among the several States," the
    correlative restrictions on the states under the Commerce Clause are
    invoked only when a state engages in regulation.             Therefore, the Supreme
    Court has drawn a distinction between state "regulation of" a market and
    state "participation in" a market.         SSC Corp. v. Town of Smithtown, 
    66 F.3d 502
    , 510 (2d Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 911
    (1996).            See South-
    Central Timber Dev., Inc. v. Wunnicke, 
    467 U.S. 82
    , 93-95 (1984) (plurality
    opinion); White v. Massachusetts Council of Constr. Employers, 460
    
    6 U.S. 204
    , 208 (1983); Reeves, Inc. v. Stake, 
    447 U.S. 429
    , 436-37 (1980);
    Hughes v. Alexandria Scrap Corp., 
    426 U.S. 794
    , 808-10 (1976).        A state
    acting as a market participant is free from the strictures of the Commerce
    Clause because "there is no indication that the [Commerce] Clause was
    intended to limit the ability of the [s]tates themselves to operate in the
    free market."   
    Charities, 82 F.3d at 799
    .     States acting in a proprietary
    capacity should be as free from federal constraints as are private market
    participants.     
    Id. We agree
    with the district court's conclusion that South Dakota's
    video lottery statute, including its residency requirement, falls within
    the market participant exception to the Commerce Clause.       To begin with,
    the statute created a state business within the gaming market.          South
    Dakota invested substantial sums of money to get the South Dakota Lottery
    off the ground.    The state owns the dominant software programs that operate
    the video lottery machines and owns the computer system that controls the
    machine payouts.        Moreover, the state presently reaps 50 percent of the
    revenue generated by the South Dakota Lottery.          Thus, South Dakota is
    actively running a business in the gaming market.       In furtherance of its
    money-making enterprise, the state has created a business relationship with
    its video lottery machine operators much akin to a partnership or joint
    venture between private parties.        Because South Dakota's choice of its
    "business partners" is made in its role as a market participant, its
    decision to deal only with corporations owned in major part by South Dakota
    residents is beyond the purview of the Commerce Clause.        "[T]he [s]tate,
    like any private [gaming company], has a right to select the parties with
    whom it will deal."       
    Id. The lure
    of the huge profits to be made in the
    gaming market proved too attractive for the legislature.      Instead of just
    taxing or regulating the other participants in the market, the legislature
    opted instead to be the largest participant, to own and to operate a huge
    piece of the
    7
    action.      That it is the dominant actor in the market does not mean it is
    not a participant.
    The plaintiffs argue that the state is not acting as a market
    participant because it is not acting as a buyer, seller, or employer.                    The
    plaintiffs base this argument on the roles the states played in the three
    Supreme Court cases applying market participant exception.                 See   
    White, 460 U.S. at 205-06
    (employer); 
    Reeves, 447 U.S. at 432
    (seller); and Alexandria
    
    Scrap, 426 U.S. at 799
    (buyer).           The reasoning of these cases, however,
    does not support the plaintiffs' argument.                The Court's inquiry in the
    market participation cases asks not whether the state is acting as a buyer,
    seller, or employer when it participates in a market, but whether the state
    is actually participating in a narrowly defined market as a proprietor
    rather      than   simply   regulating    the   actions       of   other   private   market
    participants.       Wunnicke, 
    467 U.S. 94-95
    (explaining White, Reeves, and
    Alexandria     Scrap),      97-98   (explaining   that    a    state   must   actually    be
    participating in the specific market it is regulating for the market
    participation exception to apply) (plurality opinion).                 We do not believe
    that   it    can seriously be questioned that South Dakota has invested
    substantial money and effort into participating in the narrowly defined
    gaming market as a proprietor.
    The plaintiffs argue that the residency requirement is the functional
    equivalent of the statute the district court declared unconstitutional in
    Gulch Gaming, Inc. v. South Dakota, 
    781 F. Supp. 621
    (D.S.D. 1991).                      The
    statute at issue in Gulch Gaming imposed a residency requirement on
    operators or retailers engaged in gaming in Deadwood, South Dakota.                    S.D.
    Codified Laws Ann. § 42-7B-25.           Although the statute at issue in Gulch
    Gaming appears to be analogous to the one presently before us, the state's
    role in Gulch Gaming was entirely different from its role here.                   In Gulch
    Gaming, the state had no ownership interest in the gaming activity and was
    acting solely as a regulator of gambling conducted by private
    8
    businesses in Deadwood.      Here, however, the residency requirement reflects
    a decision by the state taken as an owner and operator of the gaming
    business.
    The plaintiffs also contend that the residency requirement falls
    outside     the   market    participation        exception    because       the   residency
    requirement is unrelated to the state's participation in a private market.
    Plaintiffs    point   to    the   fact    that    the     state   imposes    a    number   of
    requirements on video lottery machine manufacturers and restricts the
    manufacturers'     sales    of    the    machines    to    licensed   distributors         and
    operators.    Plaintiffs argue that under Wunnicke, this restriction violates
    the Commerce Clause.
    Wunnicke involved a Commerce Clause based constitutional challenge
    to a requirement that timber harvested from Alaska state-owned lands be
    processed in Alaska prior to export.                
    467 U.S. 84-86
    .         In its market
    participant discussion, the Court first defined the relevant market,
    concluding that Alaska was a market participant in the timber industry as
    a seller of timber, but was not a market participant in the timber
    processing industry.       
    Id. at 98.
        A plurality of the Court concluded that
    requiring private parties who purchased timber from the state of Alaska to
    process their timber in Alaska was a downstream regulation outside of the
    relevant market in which Alaska was participating and therefore not within
    the bounds of the market participation exception.                 
    Id. at 99.
         The Court
    explained:
    The limit of the market-participant doctrine must be that it
    allows a State to impose burdens on commerce within the market
    in which it is a participant, but allows it to go no further.
    The State may not impose conditions, whether       by statute,
    regulation, or contract, that have a substantial regulatory
    effect outside of that particular market. Unless the "market"
    is relatively narrowly defined, the doctrine has the potential
    of swallowing up the rule that States may not impose
    substantial burdens on interstate commerce even if they
    9
    act with the permissible state purpose of fostering local
    industry.
    
    Id. at 97-98.
    This language indicates that the market participant exception is
    limited to the actual market in which the state is participating, and to
    that extent, the plaintiffs' assertion that the statute must be related to
    the state's participation is correct.     Once we determine that the state is
    participating in the relevant market, however, we do not scrutinize, under
    Commerce Clause analysis, whether the state's proprietary decisions best
    meet the state's goals.    We further note that unlike Alaska in Wunnicke,
    South Dakota is actually participating in the market affected by the
    legislation at issue in this case.   Moreover, the residency requirement for
    video lottery machine operators does not reach beyond those parties who are
    actually and freely dealing with the state in its business enterprise.
    The plaintiffs rely on GSW, Inc. v. Long County, 
    999 F.3d 1508
    (11th
    Cir. 1993), to support a broader interpretation of the import of Wunnicke.
    In GSW, the Eleventh Circuit held that the county was not a market
    participant where a county resolution geographically limited the sources
    of the solid waste that a local private waste disposal facility could take.
    The facts of GSW are fundamentally different from those before us today,
    because the county had no investment in the market in which it asserted it
    was participating and had even made sure it would not be subject to any
    liability.   By contrast, South Dakota has put substantial sums of money at
    risk in entering the gaming market.       Furthermore, our analysis is simply
    not altered by the court's language that, under Wunnicke,       "courts will
    scrutinize `the relationship of the subject matter of the contract [or
    legislation] and the condition imposed.'"     
    GSW, 999 F.2d at 1516
    (citation
    omitted).    Rather, that is precisely what we have done.
    10
    Our analysis is consistent with the Supreme Court's decision in
    Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 
    502 U.S. 437
    , 461 (1992).             In that case, Oklahoma
    argued that it was acting as a market participant because it owned a
    utility.      Notwithstanding Oklahoma's participation in the market, the Court
    held that Oklahoma could not require private utility companies to purchase
    a   certain     percentage   of   coal   from   Oklahoma   sources.    The    Court
    distinguished between a state's imposition of limitations on its own
    utility business and the regulation of private companies, noting that the
    statute "would become a fundamentally different piece of legislation were
    it construed to apply only to the [state-owned utility company]."            
    Id. at 461.
          If the case before us today involved a residency requirement for
    corporations doing business with private gaming companies in which the
    state had no proprietary interest, this case would be like Wyoming v.
    Colorado.3      However, we are considering "a fundamentally different piece
    of legislation"; the statute at issue in this case "applies only to the
    [state-owned gaming company]."           
    Id. As such,
    the state's residency
    requirement falls within the market participation exception to the Commerce
    Clause.
    The dissent correctly notes that the Supreme Court struck down the
    entire statute in Wyoming v. Oklahoma, declining the state's invitation to
    construe the legislation as applying only to the state-owned utility.            We
    do not believe, however, that the Court's decision not to construe the
    statute as severable or as intended to apply only to the state-owned
    utility affects our analysis.       Indeed, as we have pointed out, the Court
    expressly distinguished legislation such as that before us, and left to
    "the Oklahoma Legislature to decide whether it wishe[d] to burden [its]
    state-owned utility when private utilities will otherwise be free of . .
    . restrictions."       
    Id. See also
    SSC Corp. v. Town of Smithtown, 
    66 F.3d 502
    , 512 (2d Cir. 1995) (holding that, although the county was
    3
    Indeed, such a statute was struck down by the district court
    in Gulch Gaming.
    11
    a market participant in the waste disposal business, the county could not
    compel private parties to buy services from the local incinerator), cert.
    denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 911
    (1996); Atlantic Coast Demolition & Recycling, Inc.
    v. Board of Chosen Freeholders, 
    48 F.3d 701
    , 717 (3d Cir. 1995) (holding
    that the state was not a market participant when it was using its
    regulatory power to go beyond its own participation and to control the
    market activities of private market participants); Swin Resources Sys.,
    Inc. v. Lycoming County, 
    883 F.2d 245
    , 250 (3d Cir. 1989) (upholding
    allegedly discriminatory rules concerning the county's landfill because
    they did "not apply to private landfills and d[id] not apply beyond the
    immediate market in which [the county] transact[ed] business.").                The issue
    before us does not involve the state using "its regulatory power to control
    other[] participants in the [gaming] market."             Atlantic Coast Demolition
    & Recycling, 
    Inc. 48 F.3d at 717
    .        Rather, it involves a decision integral
    to the state's choice, as a business, as to whom it will deal with as
    operators.
    The state's use of a licensing scheme rather than a contractual
    agreement does not take this case outside of the market participation
    doctrine, as the plaintiffs contend.          See, e.g., Alexandria 
    Scrap, 426 U.S. at 808-10
    (holding that a state was acting as a market participant in its
    statutory     scheme   of   giving   in-state     scrap    processors   preferential
    treatment);    
    Charities, 82 F.3d at 799
    -800    (holding   that   a    statute
    determining the eligibility for participation in a state employees'
    charitable fund raising drive falls within the market participation
    doctrine).    The state, like any private gaming company, is free to choose
    those with whom it will deal, be it through licensure or contract.
    The plaintiffs and the dissent argue that South Dakota's involvement
    in virtually every aspect of the South Dakota Lottery, as expressed in
    South Dakota's amended constitution and state legislation, reveals that the
    state is actually regulating the
    12
    market.       We agree that the state's involvement is pervasive, but cannot
    agree that this involvement is regulation of "the market."              To the
    contrary, we believe the state is administering its own business.          The
    state, like the private gaming companies, is entitled to manage its
    business.
    Finally, the plaintiffs argue that the market participation exception
    does not apply to this case because, by state constitutional mandate, the
    state of South Dakota has a monopoly in the video lottery business in South
    Dakota.       Thus, the plaintiffs argue, the state is acting in its sovereign
    capacity.        The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals used this reasoning in
    Western Oil & Gas Ass'n v. Cory, 
    726 F.2d 1340
    (9th Cir. 1984), aff'd
    without opinion by an equally divided Court, 
    471 U.S. 81
    (1985).       In that
    case, the state of California passed a statute and promulgated regulations,
    charging oil refining companies by volume for transporting petroleum in
    pipelines over and across state-owned tidelands and submerged lands.      When
    the       companies filed a Commerce Clause challenge to the statute and
    regulations, the state argued that it was a market participant in the
    petroleum transport business.      The Ninth Circuit disagreed, focusing on the
    permanency of the plaintiffs' refining facilities, which did not allow the
    plaintiffs any option but to lease from the state the submerged and
    tidewater lands upon which their pipelines rested.        The court held that,
    under those facts, where the state had a monopoly and the companies had no
    choice but to renew their leases, the state was acting in its sovereign
    capacity as a regulator rather than as a market participant.      
    Id. at 1343.
    We are not entirely persuaded by the reasoning in Western Oil and
    4
    Gas; however, even if we were to agree, this case is
    4
    Regardless of our doubt about the reasoning in Western Oil &
    Gas, we agree with the result because the state was not actively
    engaged in the narrowly defined market of oil transportation and
    was for that reason not a market participant in that industry.
    13
    different.    This case does not concern an established business relationship
    between the state and a private party where the private party is raising
    a constitutional challenge to the state's unilateral change to the terms
    of the "contract."     Nor does this case involve parties who are forced to
    continue to deal with the state because of the permanency of their
    facilities.     Rather, it involves parties who are asserting they have a
    right to do business initially with the state, and the state determining
    that it does not want to do business with the parties.        As such, we believe
    the plaintiffs' and the dissent's reliance on Western Oil & Gas is
    misplaced.5    We further note that South Dakota's residency requirement for
    its own business does not preclude Chance Management from dealing with the
    various private gaming businesses in South Dakota.
    Having considered the arguments presented on this issue, we hold that
    the state of South Dakota is acting as a market participant in the gaming
    market by operating the South Dakota Lottery.         Further, we hold that the
    state's business decision to require that a majority interest of any
    corporate video lottery machine operator be held by South Dakota residents
    is not subject to Commerce Clause restrictions.
    B.    Equal Protection Clause
    Sanders    and   Chance   Management   also   contend   that   the   residency
    requirement violates their equal protection rights under the
    5
    The dissent finds the state's recent increase of its share of
    the State Lottery revenue to be relevant to this case.           We
    respectfully disagree. Our "activity-by-activity analysis," see
    post at 20, is confined to whether the state's decision on the
    residency requirement falls within the market participation
    exception.    Because neither Chance Management nor Sanders has
    challenged the state's decision to reap 50% of the revenue from its
    business (nor would they have standing to do so), we express no
    opinion on that issue.
    14
    Fourteenth Amendment.        The plaintiffs concede that rational basis review
    governs their equal protection challenge.                Under the rational basis
    standard, we presume legislation is valid and will sustain it if the
    classification drawn by the statute is rationally related to a legitimate
    state interest.    City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 
    473 U.S. 432
    , 440 (1985).       The statutory classification "need not be drawn so as to
    fit with precision the legitimate purposes animating it."                      Alexandria
    
    Scrap, 426 U.S. at 813
    .      Instead, the plaintiffs have the burden of proving
    that the classification is so attenuated to its asserted purpose that the
    distinction it draws is wholly arbitrary and irrational.             City of 
    Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 446
    .       Moreover, a party challenging the legislation must negate
    "every    conceivable     basis    which    might   support   it."       FCC    v.   Beach
    Communications, Inc., 
    508 U.S. 307
    , 315 (1993) (internal quotations
    omitted).     The plaintiffs contend that the state has not submitted a
    legitimate purpose for the residency requirement, and further, that the
    residency requirement is not related to any legitimate purpose.
    We find that the residency requirement is rationally related to
    legitimate interests averred by the state.               It is axiomatic that the
    state's   first    submitted      interest,   preventing   illegal    activities       and
    infiltration by outside criminal elements into the South Dakota Lottery,
    is a legitimate purpose.          Furthermore, we agree with the district court
    that "[g]ambling is generally understood to have a greater tendency to
    attract     criminal     infiltration      than   most   other   types    of     business
    enterprises."      Chance 
    Management, 876 F. Supp. at 212
    .            We note that in
    furtherance of its interest in protecting against the infiltration of
    criminal elements, South Dakota closely monitors the video lottery machine
    operators.    The state undertakes an extensive background investigation on
    each applicant.        Those investigations include contacts with foreign law
    enforcement bodies and sometimes require personal contact to conduct
    interviews and verify information.            (J.A. at 50-51.)       In addition, the
    state conducts periodic inspections of the operators' premises.                  (J.A. at
    15
    51.)   While the state's use of a residency requirement to prevent criminal
    infiltration in its video lottery business may not be the perfect solution,
    a legislature could rationally conclude that the South Dakota Lottery can
    better protect the state's legitimate interests if the corporate operators
    of the machines -- who maintain the video machines and who collect and
    temporarily hold large sums of money from them -- are owned in major part
    by residents of South Dakota.
    We also agree with the district court that the state has a legitimate
    interest in insuring that the state's substantial investment in its video
    lottery business ultimately benefits the South Dakota taxpayers.         The
    legislature could have rationally concluded that a residency requirement
    would further this interest. Cf. Smith Setzer & Sons, Inc. v. S. C.
    Procurement Review Panel, 
    20 F.3d 1311
    (4th Cir. 1994) (holding statute was
    rationally related to state's legitimate interest in directing benefits
    generated by state purchases to the citizens of the state).
    Accordingly, we hold that § 42-7A-43 of the South Dakota Codified
    Laws does not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment.
    C.   Privileges and Immunities Clause
    In their final claim, appellants argue that South Dakota's residency
    requirement violates the Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV,
    Section 2 of the United States Constitution, which states that "citizens
    of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of
    Citizens in the several States."    The state responds that neither Chance
    Management nor Sanders has standing.      The state further argues that if we
    hold that Sanders has standing, he should lose on the merits, because the
    South Dakota residency requirement does not burden a fundamental privilege
    or immunity covered by the Privileges and Immunities
    16
    and because the state's interest in the profitability and the
    We                                                                          d
    Immunities Clause rea
    has                                                                                 e
    Management                                                                          ,
    Chanc        Management cannot raise the Privileges and Immunities claim.
    ization, 
    451 U.S. 648
    , 656
    Sanders, who has not applied individually for a license as an
    and whose only    "injury" is that flowing from his status as a
    of Chance Management, also lacks standing.          Smith Setzer
    
    Sons, 20 F.2d at 1311
    .
    rs   attempts   to   distinguish    the    cases   holding   that   a
    individual's status as a shareholder is
    noting that § 42-7A-43 prohibits nonresident individuals, as well a
    corporations                                                                        r
    licenses.                                          individual applicants is not at
    issue                                                                               n
    operator's license.
    Sanders a                                                                   e
    applicant in this cas
    the statutory requirements imposed by South Dakota Codified Laws § 42-7A-
    which provides for a background investigation and requires operators
    meet certain qualifications to obtain a license.             This argument i
    unpersuasive because it does not address the material question -- whether
    has a cognizable injury under the Privileges and Immunities Clause
    Regardless of the extra hurdles Sanders,
    for Chance Management to obtain an operator's license, the
    17
    potential injury that denying the license to Chance Management may cause
    to Sanders flows directly and solely from the alleged injury to Chance
    Management, which is "not constitutionally cognizable under the Privileges
    and Immunities Clause."       Smith Setzer & 
    Sons, 20 F.3d at 1317
    .                We
    therefore hold that neither Chance Management nor Sanders has standing to
    bring the Privileges and Immunities Clause claim.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district
    court.
    LAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    With    all   due   respect,   the    fundamental   flaw   in   the   majority's
    reasoning is the manner in which it frames the issue.            The majority asks
    whether the state of South Dakota, in exclusively favoring its residents
    in the operation of a video lottery business, is acting as a "market
    participant" or a "market regulator."            Upon finding that the state is a
    market participant in the video lottery business (indeed, it operates a
    monopoly) on account of its substantial investment in a central computer,
    software, and related expenses, the court declares it immune from Commerce
    Clause restrictions.6
    The difficulty with the majority's stated approach is that it fails
    to ask whether, while acting as a market participant, the state has also
    illegally attempted to regulate the market.           As the
    6
    The Commerce Clause restricts the states in discriminating
    against interstate commerce. Thus, the Supreme Court has generally
    recognized that the "'negative' aspect of the Commerce Clause
    prohibits economic protectionism--that is, regulatory measures
    designed to benefit in-state economic interests by burdening out-
    of-state competitors." New Energy Co. v. Limbach, 
    486 U.S. 269
    ,
    273-74 (1988).
    18
    Circuit has explained, "[c]ourts must evaluate separately eac
    challenged                                                                            s
    participation or regu                  USA Recycling, Inc. v. Town of Babylon, 66
    1272, 1282 (2d Cir. 1995), cert. denied                                and cert.
    denied     
    116 S. Ct. 1452
    (1996).         Dissenting in            , Justice Powell
    this   truism   when   he    observed   that   "[s]tate   action   burdening
    trade is no less state action because it is accomplished by a
    agency authorized to participate in the private market."
    Inc. v. Stake                         451 (1980) (Powell, J., dissenting).         Thus,
    the fact that a state may participate in the mar
    does not m                                                                            e
    majorit     reduces the distinction between market regulation and market
    The majority principally relies on H                                          ,
    
    426 U.S. 794
    , 810 (1976), and Reeves                                                  e
    cases, however, did t
    in a policy of discrimination.             Reeves, Inc. v. Kelley
    737 (8th Cir. 1979) (noting the complete absence of an "allegation tha
    South    Dakota regulated or restricted out-of-state sale of privatel
    manufactured cement or exercised its police power to suppress competition
    7
    ), aff'd                               More
    Indeed, the Supreme court in                       expressly distinguished
    such cases in observing that:
    South Dakota has not sought to limit access to the
    limestone or other materials used to make cement
    Nor ha                                                  r
    sister                                                  .
    Moreover, petitioner has not s
    possesses                                               o
    produce cement.
    Likewise, the Court in Hughes upheld Maryland's subsidization
    of         in-state automobile scrap metal processing market on the
    cal effect" of the challenged scheme
    "wa      that the movement of hulks in interstate commerce was
    
    426 U.S. 19
    importantly, Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 
    502 U.S. 437
    (1992), directly refuted the
    majority's analysis.   There the Court struck down an Oklahoma statute which
    required all public and private utilities within the state to supply ten
    percent of their fuel needs from Oklahoma-mined coal.     While acknowledging
    that Oklahoma, as a participant in the coal market, could purchase coal
    from whomever it chose, 
    id. at 461,
    the Court invalidated Oklahoma's
    regulatory   conduct   in    imposing   purchase   requirements   upon   private
    8
    utilities.   
    Id. at 454-59.
    In discussing Wyoming v. Oklahoma, the majority takes comfort in the
    Supreme Court’s observation that were the Oklahoma law construed to apply
    only to the state-owned public utility (Grand River Dam Authority) (GRDA)
    the statute “would become a fundamentally different piece of legislation.”
    Ante at 11 (citing Wyoming v. 
    Oklahoma, 502 U.S. at 461
    ).           If the law
    struck down in Wyoming v. Oklahoma were applied only to the GRDA, and the
    market participant exception were applied, private utilities would be free
    to make their own decisions from whom they might buy coal unimpeded by
    government regulation.      In contrast, because of the way South Dakota has
    structured and regulated the video lottery market, private companies are
    not free to do business unimpeded by government regulation, without facing
    criminal penalties.    Beyond
    at 803 & n.13.     The Court distinguished prior cases involving
    "interfere[nce] with the natural functioning of the interstate
    market   either   through   prohibition   or   through   burdensome
    regulation," concluding that "Maryland has not sought to prohibit
    the flow of hulks, or to regulate the conditions under which it may
    occur. Instead, it has entered into the market itself to bid up
    their price." 
    Id. at 806.
            8
    Because the Court found it impracticable to sever that
    portion of the statute governing state-owned utilities, it declared
    the Act as a whole unconstitutional. 
    Id. at 459-61.
    20
    choosing its own “business partners,” South Dakota has regulated all actors
    in the video lottery market by prohibiting transactions between private
    parties.   Although South Dakota is participating in the market, its
    statutory commands reach beyond merely dictating terms to its “business
    partners,” and therefore its regulation of the video lottery market is
    similar to the law struck down in Wyoming v. Oklahoma.
    In contrast to the analysis urged by the majority, the decisions of
    several other circuits support an activity-by-activity analysis where the
    state both regulates and participates in the relevant market.   In Atlantic
    Coast Demolition & Recycling, Inc. v. Board of Chosen Freeholders, for
    example, the Third Circuit observed:
    When a public entity participates in a market, it may sell and
    buy what it chooses, to or from whom it chooses, on terms of
    its choice; its market participation does not, however, confer
    upon it the right to use its regulatory power to control the
    actions of others in that market.
    
    48 F.3d 701
    , 717 (3d Cir. 1995); accord SSC Corp. v. Town of Smithtown, 
    66 F.3d 502
    , 513 (2d Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 911
    (1996).      The
    Second Circuit has likewise stated:
    [The Town of] Babylon has exercised its governmental powers by
    denying licenses to all garbage haulers but the one hired by
    the Town, and by establishing civil and criminal penalties for
    haulers who collect garbage without a license.       Because no
    private actor could engage in such activity, the Town is acting
    as a market regulator rather than a market participant. The
    Town does 'participate' in the garbage collection market in a
    different respect:     it buys garbage hauling services from
    BSSCI. But states and local governments do not enjoy carte
    blanche to regulate a market simply because they also
    participate in that market. Particular state actions that do
    not constitute 'market participation' are subject to the
    limitations imposed by the Commerce Clause. A state engaging
    in mercantile activity does not
    21
    obtain blanket immunity to regulate the market in which it
    participates, free from the strictures of the dormant Commerce
    Clause.
    USA 
    Recycling, 66 F.3d at 1282
    (citations omitted).
    Similarly, in Western Oil & Gas Ass'n v. Cory, 
    726 F.2d 1340
    (9th
    Cir. 1984), aff'd without opinion by an equally divided court, 
    471 U.S. 81
    (1985), the Ninth Circuit recognized that a state's ownership interest in
    a market does not exempt its regulation of the market from Commerce Clause
    scrutiny.   Western Oil & Gas involved a California scheme to collect a
    volume-based "rent" from off-coast refineries for the leasing of state-
    owned tidelands over which they transported oil.   The state contended that
    its leasehold activities fell outside the scope of the Commerce Clause on
    the basis that, as owner of the tidelands, it acted in a proprietary
    capacity in renting them.   
    Id. at 1342.
      The court rejected that argument:
    The State owns and controls tidelands and submerged lands in
    its sovereign capacity. Although some of the lands are in the
    possession of local State entities or private interests, this
    does not mean that California becomes one of many competitors.
    The permanency of plaintiffs' facilities does not permit them
    to "shop around". There is no other competitor to which they
    can go for the rental of the required strip of California
    coastline. The Commission has a complete monopoly over the
    sites used by the oil companies. The companies have no choice
    but to renew their leases despite the volumetric rate, as the
    oil, gas and petroleum-derived products cannot be transported
    to plaintiffs' facilities without traversing the state-owned
    lands. This control over the channels of interstate commerce
    permits the State to erect substantial impediments to the free
    flow of commerce. We therefore reject the State's contention
    that its leasing activities are not subject to Commerce Clause
    scrutiny.
    
    Id. at 1343
    (emphasis added and citations omitted).
    22
    There        as no doubt in Western Oil & Gas                                       e
    tidelands                                                        their oil.      Yet the fact
    that it wielded monopolitistic power, and as such was a market participant,
    not deter the court from holding that its regulatory function wa
    subject to dormant Commerce Clause scrutiny.
    The                               Western Oil & Gas on the ground that the
    present case "does not involve parties who are forced to deal with the
    State in a monopoly situation that falls outside the reach of free market
    forces," but rather "parties who are asserting they have a right to do
    business initially with the State, and the state determining that it does
    not   want     to    do    business     with   the   parties."      Ante    at     14.   This
    characterization slights the fact that in deciding that it "does not want
    to do business" with Chance, the state has also foreclosed the opportunity
    for Chance "to do business" with anyone else, much as the refineries in
    Western Oil & Gas were foreclosed from dealing with other landowners.                      If
    the   rationale           behind     market    participation     doctrine     is    genuinely
    evenhandedness, see 
    Reeves, 447 U.S. at 439
    (where "state proprietary
    activities" are "burdened with the same restrictions imposed on private
    market participants," then "[e]venhandedness" supports invocation of market
    participant doctrine), then it would seem that South Dakota must take the
    bitter with the sweet:             it may not enter the market as a purchaser of video
    lottery operation services while precluding, through the use of its
    regulatory power, all potential competitors from entering the market.9                    If
    anything, the instant case presents facts more compelling than Western Oil
    & Gas for not applying the market participant exception, for the state has
    a monopoly over video lottery as a direct result of its
    At oral argument South Dakota conceded that, if the market
    participation exception does not apply, its interests in regulating
    23
    erely by "happenstance."10      Reeves
    at           see        C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown             .
    1677,              (1994) ("With respect to this stream of commerce, the flow
    ordinance discriminates, for it allows only the favored operator
    process waste that is within the limits of the town.");            at 1683
    the flow control ordinance favors a single local proprietor . .
    There should be little question in the present case that South Dakota
    not simply exercising a private choice as to the parties with whom it
    Indeed, by its own constitutional and legislative enactments
    10
    oretically the refineries involved in Western Oil & Ga
    cou   have dealt with other landowners; only the cost prohibited
    from so doing. Here, by contrast, entry into the market i
    not cost prohibitive, but constitutionally and statutoril
    forbidden.
    1
    n
    question                                                        e
    monopoly                                                        a
    state business within the gaming market,”     at 7, and adds that
    oes not
    preclu   Chance Management from dealing with the various private
    Ante at 14. These statements
    soften the fact that South Dakota made itself the only
    artner” with whom plaintiffs may enter the video lotter
    business. To suggest that the plaintiffs can merely go elsewhere
    into other private gaming is a tacit admission that the state has
    the video lottery market, and seems to ignore the
    ority’s own command that the court’s inquiry is limited t
    analyzing a narrowly defined market.
    24
    the state concedes that it is regulating the market.12   Pursuant to the
    constitutional grant of authority within
    12
    Article III, § 25 of the South Dakota Constitution, for
    example, provides in relevant part:
    The Legislature shall not authorize any game of chance
    lottery, or gift enterprise, under any pretense, or for
    any purpose whatever . . . . However, it shall be lawful
    for the Legislature to authorize by law a state lottery
    or video games of chance, or both, which are regulated by
    the state of South Dakota, either separately by the state or
    jointly with one or more states, and which are owned and operated
    by the state of South Dakota, either separately by the state or
    jointly with one or more states or persons, provided any such video
    games of chance shall not directly dispense coins or tokens.
    However, the Legislature shall not expand the statutory authority
    existing as of June 1, 1994, regarding any private ownership of
    state lottery games or video games of chance, or both.          The
    Legislature shall establish the portion of proceeds due the state
    from such lottery or video games of chance, or both, and the
    purposes for which those proceeds are to be used. SDCL 42-7A, and
    its amendments, regulations, and related laws, and all acts and
    contracts relying for authority upon such laws and regulations,
    beginning July 1, 1987, to the effective date of this amendment,
    are ratified and approved.
    25
    Section 25, the South Dakota legislature has del
    Lottery                                                                          n
    of             y] games."   S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 42-7A-2 (Michie Supp.
    Likewise, § 42-7A-21 authorizes the Commission to promulgate
    ules and regulations" concerning seventeen aspects of the lottery
    including                                                                        e
    amount of application fees to be paid," 
    id. g proce
               
    id. § 42-7A-21(16).
        As South Dakota admits in its brief:
    "The State's involvement in video lottery is pervasive.           Virtually every
    aspect    of    video   lottery   operations   is   owned,   operated,   specified,
    controlled or monitored by the State."         Brief for Appellees at 12.
    Although the majority asserts that South Dakota "is free to choose
    those with whom it will deal, be it through licensure or contract," ante
    at 13, the granting and denial of licenses is far more akin to market
    regulation than to market participation.       Public licensure is not generally
    contractual in nature: a license neither grants the licensee a property
    right nor creates a mutual
    26
    obligation.13        If anything, public licensing constitutes a "primeval
    governmental activity" such as the taxation scheme favoring in-state
    residents found to fall outside of the market participant exception in
    
    Limbach, 486 U.S. at 277
    .
    The     state    concedes   that   licensing normally entails   authorizing
    private "individuals to pursue private occupations that demand a minimum
    13
    One authority defines "license" (in part):
    A permit, granted by an appropriate governmental
    body, generally for a consideration, to a person, firm,
    or corporation . . . to carry on some business subject to
    regulation under the police power. A license is not a
    contract between the state and the licensee, but is a
    mere personal permit.     Neither is it property or a
    property right.
    Black's Law Dictionary 829 (5th ed. 1979) (citations omitted). The
    final phrase in the quoted passage is helpful in light of the
    public policy declaration found in S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 42-7A-
    56(3) (Michie Supp. 1995):
    No applicant for a license or other affirmative
    commission action has any right to a license or to the
    granting of the approval sought. Any license issued or
    other commission approval granted pursuant to the
    provisions of this chapter is a revocable privilege, and
    no holder acquires any vested interest or property right
    therein or thereunder.
    Accordingly, this section too suggests the state's licensing scheme
    is regulatory, not proprietary, in nature, for a contract creates
    bargained for rights and obligations.      Compare, e.g., Rushmore
    State Bank v. Kurylas, Inc., 
    424 N.W.2d 649
    , 653 (S.D. 1988)
    (noting that "there are property rights in the [liquor] license as
    between the licensee and third parties such as creditors," but
    "there clearly is no general property right in the license in South
    Dakota as between the state and the licensee") with Black's Law
    Dictionary at 291-92 (5th ed. 1979) (defining "contract" (in part)
    as "[a]n agreement between two or more persons which creates an
    obligation to do or not to do a particular thing. Its essentials
    are competent parties, subject matter, a legal consideration,
    mutuality of agreement, and mutuality of obligation.").
    27
    level of proficiency, skill and competency," but contends that its lottery
    licensing regime merely "provides the individual
    28
    or business with the ability to participate in the State's video lottery
    business enterprise."     Brief for Appellees at 16.            This assertion (which
    is   unsupported   by   any    authority)    is    dubious,   given   the   substantial
    eligibility requirements delineated in S.D. Codified Laws Ann. §§ 42-7A-13
    and 42-7A-14 (Michie Supp. 1995).                The granting and denial of public
    licenses clearly constitutes market regulation.               See 
    Reeves, 447 U.S. at 440
    ; cf. Richard A. Epstein, The Permit Power Meets the Constitution, 
    81 Iowa L
    . Rev. 407, 414 (1995) (["N]o matter how generous a view one takes
    of the permit power, one still must distinguish between the state as
    regulator and the state as owner.            Quite bluntly, the power to issue a
    permit does not--or at least should not--make the state a part owner of the
    property.").
    The state's unilateral decision to increase its share of video
    lottery revenues from 35 to 50 percent also detracts from its argument that
    it is not regulating the video lottery market.           See S.D. Codified Laws Ann.
    § 42-7A-63 (Michie Supp. 1995).       In a competitive market, such an increase
    in a licensor's share of revenues would normally be the product of
    bilateral negotiations in which the possibility of losing the licensee to
    a competitor would serve to limit the licensor's bargaining power.                Here,
    however, the state has no competitors, for it has erected a legal barrier
    to their entry into the video lottery market.             Private entities enjoy no
    such comparable power.        See SSC 
    Corp., 66 F.3d at 512
    ("A state's actions
    constitute 'market participation' only if a private party could have
    engaged in the same actions.").       Characterizing the state's activity as a
    "refusal to deal" with nonresident corporations is therefore misleading.
    Compare United States v. Colgate & Co., 
    250 U.S. 300
    , 307 (1919) ("In the
    absence of any purpose to create or maintain a monopoly, the [Sherman] act
    does not restrict the long recognized right of trader or manufacturer
    engaged in an entirely private business, freely to exercise his own
    independent discretion as to parties with whom he will deal.") with Eastman
    Kodak Co. v. Southern Photo Materials Co., 
    273 U.S. 359
    ,
    29
    375   (1927) (finding refusal to deal "in pursuance of a purpose to
    monopolize" illegal under the Sherman Act).   Cf. Epstein, supra at 416 ("In
    ordinary markets, if you don't like the terms that people offer, you can
    go elsewhere.   But there is no effective exit right when the state asserts
    its permit power.     The state, which has a stranglehold on individual
    behavior, must be told to relax its grip." (footnote omitted)).
    To be sure, South Dakota "participates" at some level in the video
    lottery market each time it "contracts" with a state-licensed video lottery
    operator, and the majority is quite correct to reject Chance's argument
    that the market participant doctrine is limited to circumstances in which
    a state formally acts as a buyer, seller, or employer.14        Under South
    Dakota's licensing scheme, however, only corporations owned in their
    majority by residents are permitted to enter the video lottery market;
    nonresident-owned corporations are "removed from the market altogether,"
    
    Reeves, 447 U.S. at 444
    n.17, for one may not operate a video lottery
    machine without a license, and doing so is in fact punishable as a felony.
    See S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 42-7A-39 (1991).   Imposing criminal penalties
    may not fairly be considered an act of a market participant.        See SSC
    
    Corp., 66 F.3d at 512
    .   Pursuant to its state
    14
    See South-Central Timber Dev., Inc. v. Wunnicke, 
    467 U.S. 82
    ,
    97 (1984) (plurality opinion) ("privity of contract is not always
    the outer boundary of permissible state activity"); White v.
    Massachusetts Council of Constr. Employers, Inc., 
    460 U.S. 204
    , 211
    n.7 (1983) ("[T]he Commerce Clause does not require the city to
    stop at the boundary of formal privity of contract."); 
    Reeves, 447 U.S. at 438
    n.10 (noting that "States may fairly claim some measure
    of a sovereign interest in retaining freedom to decide how, with
    whom, and for whose benefit to deal"); 
    Reeves, 603 F.2d at 737
    n.1
    (a state possesses "'unrestricted power to produce its own
    supplies, to determine those with whom it will deal, and to fix the
    terms and conditions upon which it will make needed purchases'"
    (quoting Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co., 
    310 U.S. 113
    , 127 (1940)),
    aff'd, 
    447 U.S. 429
    (1980); Independent Charities of Am., Inc. v.
    Minnesota, 
    82 F.3d 791
    , 799 (8th Cir. 1996) (finding "no well-
    founded reason to constrict the proprietary activities covered by
    the market participant exception to acts of buying or selling").
    30
    constitution, South Dakota is the            "purchaser" of video lottery
    in which Chance might sell
    its services, nor is there any residual purchase                       See
    S.D. Const. Art. III,
    of . . . lottery . . . .").15
    of the hallmarks of p
    to characterize its video lottery arrangement
    See    
    nnicke, 467 U.S. at 97
    (plurality opinion) (market participan
    doctrine                                                                 e
    imposes it upon someone with whom it is in contractual privity").
    scheme set out by the South Dakota legislature, it should
    be obvious that the state is using its police po
    lottery in a manner that precludes
    entrepreneur.                                                            ]
    impeding free private trade in the national marketplace."   Reeves       .
    at         nfortunately, Chance has no opportunity to compete on equal
    I must, therefore, respectfully dissent.
    15
    e
    titors,
    but      mpletely foreclosed market. See 
    Reeves, 447 U.S. at 44
    n.17 ("The 'bottom line' of the scheme closely parallels the result
    Alexandria Scrap                                              t
    remove from the market altogether; to compete successfully with
    competitors, however, they must achieve additional
    to                                                                       n
    market behavior to in-state concrete suppliers.").
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
    32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1665

Citation Numbers: 97 F.3d 1107

Filed Date: 10/10/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (23)

ssc-corp-plaintiff-counter-defendant-appellee-v-town-of-smithtown-town , 66 F.3d 502 ( 1995 )

atlantic-coast-demolition-recycling-inc-v-board-of-chosen-freeholders , 48 F.3d 701 ( 1995 )

independent-charities-of-america-inc-local-independent-charities-inc , 82 F.3d 791 ( 1996 )

Cotto Waxo Company v. Charles W. Williams, as Commissioner ... , 46 F.3d 790 ( 1995 )

smith-setzer-sons-incorporated-neil-setzer-individually-and-as , 20 F.3d 1311 ( 1994 )

swin-resource-systems-inc-v-lycoming-county-pennsylvania-acting , 883 F.2d 245 ( 1989 )

Eastman Kodak Co. v. Southern Photo Materials Co. , 47 S. Ct. 400 ( 1927 )

Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co. , 60 S. Ct. 869 ( 1940 )

Reeves, Inc. v. Stake , 100 S. Ct. 2271 ( 1980 )

Western Oil and Gas Association v. Kenneth Cory , 726 F.2d 1340 ( 1984 )

United States v. Colgate & Co. , 39 S. Ct. 465 ( 1919 )

Hughes v. Oklahoma , 99 S. Ct. 1727 ( 1979 )

Western & Southern Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of ... , 101 S. Ct. 2070 ( 1981 )

White v. Massachusetts Council of Construction Employers, ... , 103 S. Ct. 1042 ( 1983 )

Hughes v. Alexandria Scrap Corp. , 96 S. Ct. 2488 ( 1976 )

Cory v. Western Oil & Gas Assn. , 105 S. Ct. 1859 ( 1985 )

City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center, Inc. , 105 S. Ct. 3249 ( 1985 )

New Energy Co. of Indiana v. Limbach , 108 S. Ct. 1803 ( 1988 )

Wyoming v. Oklahoma , 112 S. Ct. 789 ( 1992 )

South-Central Timber Development, Inc. v. Wunnicke , 104 S. Ct. 2237 ( 1984 )

View All Authorities »