State of Illinois v. Elite Staffing, Inc. , 2022 IL App (1st) 210840 ( 2022 )


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    2022 IL App (1st) 210840
    FIFTH DIVISION
    Order filed: June 3, 2022
    No. 1-21-0840
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, by its                                 )   Appeal from the
    Attorney General, KWAME RAOUL,                                )   Circuit Court of
    )   Cook County.
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                    )
    )
    v.                                                            )   No. 2020 CH 5156
    )
    ELITE STAFFING, INC., METRO                                   )
    STAFF, INC., MIDWAY STAFFING,                                 )
    INC., and COLONY DISPLAY LLC,                                 )   Honorable
    )   Raymond W. Mitchell,
    Defendants-Appellants.                                 )   Judge, presiding.
    JUSTICE HOFFMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Presiding Justice Delort and Justice Cunningham concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1     The Attorney General of Illinois on behalf of the State of Illinois filed the instant action
    against three staffing agencies, Elite Staffing, Inc., Metro Staff, Inc., and Midway Staffing, Inc.
    (hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Agency Defendants”), and their mutual client Colony
    Display, LLC (Colony), alleging that the defendants entered into unlawful conspiracies in violation
    of the Illinois Antitrust Act (Act) (740 ILCS 10/1 et seq. (West 2018)). The defendants filed two
    No. 1-21-0840
    motions to dismiss the action pursuant to section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735
    ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2020). The circuit court denied the defendants’ motions and thereafter, in
    response to the defendants’ motions, certified the following two questions for interlocutory appeal
    pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 308 (eff. Oct. 1, 2019):
    1. Whether the definition of “Service” under Section 4 of the Illinois Antitrust Act, 740
    ILCS 10/4 [(“Act”)], which states that Service “shall not be deemed to include labor
    which is performed by natural persons as employees of others,” applies to the [Act] as a
    whole and thus excludes all labor services from the [Act]’s coverage.
    2. Whether the per se rule under Section 3(1) of the [Act], 740 ILCS 10/3(1), which
    states that it applies to conspiracies among “competitor[s],” extends to alleged horizontal
    agreements facilitated by a vertical noncompetitor.
    We answer the first question, with a modification for clarity and accuracy, by holding that the
    services provided by staffing agencies are generally not excluded from the Act’s coverage. The
    second question we answer as written by holding that the per se rule can apply to horizontal
    agreements facilitated by vertical noncompetitors when such agreements evidence naked restraint
    of competition.
    ¶2     The following facts are drawn from the allegations in the State’s complaint, which we
    accept as true and construe in the State’s favor at the motion-to-dismiss stage. See Borowiec v.
    Gateway 2000, Inc., 
    209 Ill. 2d 376
    , 382 (2004).
    ¶3     Colony designs, manufactures, and installs customized fixtures, exhibits, and displays for
    home improvement, retail, and hospitality businesses. It relies heavily on temporary workers to
    carry out this work, with such employees generally comprising the majority of its workforce. The
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    No. 1-21-0840
    Agency Defendants are temporary staffing agencies that recruit, select, and hire employees for
    their clients. Colony hired all three Agency Defendants to perform such services at two of Colony’s
    facilities.
    ¶4      In addition to the initial hiring of temporary employees, Colony also tasked the Agency
    Defendants with a degree of ongoing management of the temporary employees. This included the
    Agency Defendants providing dedicated on-site supervisors at Colony’s facilities, paying the
    temporary employees’ wages and benefits, and retaining sole authority over the hiring, assigning,
    and firing of the temporary employees assigned to Colony.
    ¶5      The State alleges in its complaint that during their work for Colony, the Agency Defendants
    “agreed with each other not to recruit, solicit, hire, or ‘poach’ temporary employees from one
    another at Colony’s facilities,” and that “Colony facilitated the Agency Defendants’ agreement by
    acting as a go-between to communicate about the agreement among the Agency Defendants and
    by assisting in enforcing the Agency Defendants’ no-poach conspiracy.” In support of this
    allegation that Colony facilitated the conspiracy, the State cites numerous communications
    between various representatives of the Agency Defendants and the CEO of Colony. As further
    proof of the conspiracy, the State also cites communications among representatives of the Agency
    Defendants themselves.
    ¶6      The State also alleges in its complaint that, at Colony’s request, the Agency Defendants
    agreed to fix the wages of their temporary employees at a below-market rate determined by
    Colony. As with the alleged no-poach agreement, the State alleges that Colony facilitated the
    Agency Defendants’ communications regarding this alleged wage-fixing conspiracy. The State’s
    complaint presents the two alleged conspiracies as per se violations of the Act that can be deemed
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    No. 1-21-0840
    illegal without any further consideration of the competitive and economic purposes and
    consequences of the alleged arrangements.
    ¶7      The defendants together filed two motions to dismiss pursuant to section 2-615 of the Code,
    arguing, among other things, that their business of “supplying labor,” which the Agency
    Defendants also refer to as “labor services,” is exempt from the Act’s coverage and that the
    facilitation of the conspiracies by a vertical non-competitor (Colony) removes the alleged
    conspiracies from the ambit of subsection 3(1) of the Act (740 ILCS 10/3(1) (West 2018)).
    ¶8      The circuit court rejected the defendants’ arguments and denied their motions to dismiss.
    The defendants then moved for the court to certify two questions for interlocutory appeal under
    Supreme Court Rule 308. The court granted the request and certified the two questions set forth
    above. We allowed the interlocutory appeal. 1
    ¶9      Rule 308 “allows for permissive appeal of an interlocutory order certified by the trial court
    as involving a question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion and
    where an immediate appeal may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.” In
    re Estate of Luccio, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 121153
    , ¶ 17. When reviewing a certified question, “we are
    limited to answering the specific question certified by the trial court[,] to which we apply a de
    novo standard of review.” 
    Id.
     (citing Moore v. City of Chicago Park District, 
    2012 IL 112788
    , ¶
    9). When conducting that review, the “scope of review is generally limited to the certified
    question.” 
    Id.
     at ¶ 25 (citing Moore, 
    2012 IL 112788
    , ¶ 9). However, when appropriate a court
    1
    In addition to the briefs filed by the parties, we have also reviewed briefs filed by amici curae
    Staffing Services Association of Illinois, Raise the Floor Alliance, National Legal Advocacy Network,
    National Employment Law Project, and Professor Eric A. Posner. The court appreciates their additional
    perspectives.
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    No. 1-21-0840
    may “modif[y] a certified question or read a certified question in such a way as to bring it within
    the ambit of a proper question of law.” Id. at ¶ 28.
    ¶ 10   We begin with the first certified question: “Whether the definition of ‘Service’ under
    Section 4 of the Illinois Antitrust Act, 740 ILCS 10/4, which states that Service ‘shall not be
    deemed to include labor which is performed by natural persons as employees of others,’ applies to
    the Act as a whole and thus excludes all labor services from the Act’s coverage.”
    ¶ 11   Although it presents a proper question of law, we must modify the first certified question
    because, as written, it contains an erroneous premise that application of section 4’s definition of
    “service” to the entire Act necessarily exempts so-called “labor services” from the Act’s coverage.
    As we explain below, that is not the case. However, because the essence of the question is apparent
    in the parties’ briefs and the record, we will still answer the question after rephrasing it to address
    the core issue: whether the exclusion of individual labor from the definition of “service” in section
    4 of the Act also excludes the labor-related services provided by temporary staffing agencies and
    therefore exempts such agencies from the Act’s coverage. See Fireman's Fund Insurance Co. v.
    SEC Donohue, Inc., 
    176 Ill. 2d 160
    , 166 (1997) (modifying a certified question to delete an
    erroneous statement of law); Batson v. Township Village Associates, LP, 
    2019 IL App (5th) 170403
    , ¶ 30 (modifying an “inartfully worded and incomplete” certified question to address what
    it “essentially asks”). For the reasons explained more fully below, we hold that it does not.
    ¶ 12   Our analysis begins with the statutory provisions governing the defendants’ alleged
    antitrust violations. The State alleges that the defendants’ no-poach and wage-fixing conspiracies
    each violated subsection 3(1) of the Act. In relevant part, that subsection prohibits conspiring to
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    No. 1-21-0840
    take various specified anticompetitive actions towards a “service.” 740 ILCS 10/3(1) (West 2018).
    It is the definition of the term “service” that is the central issue in the first certified question.
    ¶ 13    Section 4 of the Act, titled “Definitions,” provides two definitions of the term “service.”
    740 ILCS 10/4 (West 2018). That section first states that, “[a]s used in this act, unless the context
    requires otherwise: * * * ‘Service’ shall mean any activity, not covered by the definition of
    ‘commodity,’ which is performed in whole or in part for the purpose of financial gain.” 
    Id.
    “Commodity,” in turn, is defined as “any kind of real or personal property.” 
    Id.
     There is no dispute
    that the alleged conspiracies in this case do not concern commodities. Therefore, we focus on the
    meaning of “service,” and in particular section 4’s second definition of the term, which provides
    that “ ‘[s]ervice’ shall not be deemed to include labor which is performed by natural persons as
    employees of others.” 
    Id.
     The Agency Defendants read this second definition, and specifically its
    use of the term “labor,” as excluding from the Act’s coverage the “labor services” that they provide
    to their clients.
    ¶ 14    Our consideration of this issue of statutory interpretation is governed by the well-
    established principle that “[o]ur primary objective in construing a statute is to ascertain and give
    effect to the intent of the legislature.” In re Estate of Luccio, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 121153
    , ¶ 21 (citing
    In re Estate of Ellis, 
    236 Ill. 2d 45
    , 50 (2009)). “The best evidence of legislative intent is the
    language of the statute itself, which must be given its plain and ordinary meaning.” 
    Id.
     (citing Ellis,
    
    236 Ill. 2d at 50
    ).
    ¶ 15    We view the plain language of section 4’s definitions of “service” to be unambiguous and
    sufficiently clear to resolve the question presented. The second definition clearly expresses the
    idea that an individual’s labor for their employer is not a service. The obvious intention behind
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    this is to allow individuals to engage in otherwise anticompetitive behavior regarding their own
    labor by participating in collective bargaining and related conduct. We find support for this
    conclusion in the labor exception contained in section 5 of the Act (740 ILCS 10/5 (West 2018)).
    ¶ 16   Section 5, titled “Exceptions,” provides, in relevant part, that “[n]o provisions of this Act
    shall be construed to make illegal: (1) the activities of any labor organization or of individual
    members thereof which are directed solely to labor objectives which are legitimate under the laws
    of either the State of Illinois or the United States.” 
    Id.
     The Bar Committee Comments, which both
    the supreme court and this court have considered when interpreting the Act (see Laughlin v.
    Evanston Hospital, 
    133 Ill. 2d 374
    , 386–87 (1990), and Blake v. H-F Group Multiple Listing
    Service, 
    36 Ill. App. 3d 730
    , 741 (1st Dist. 1976)), explain that “[t]he labor exemption in subsection
    (1), like that of Section 6 of the Clayton Act, prevents the application of the Antitrust Act to
    legitimate labor objectives and activities of unions or of individual members thereof.” 
    Id.
     Bar
    Comm. Cmts.-1967 (West 2018). The comments further note that “[t]he labor exemption should
    be read together with the provision of Section 4 which states that labor performed as an employee
    is not a ‘service’ within the meaning of Section 3 of the Act,” with the effect being that “[t]he Act
    [is] inapplicable to agreements by either labor or nonlabor groups insofar as they relate to restraint
    of competition concerning labor itself. The Act thus protects both management and labor in
    bargaining collectively over terms and conditions of employment.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 17   The Agency Defendants attempt to broaden this exception by arguing that it includes
    conduct “related to labor services.” But they provide no specific definition for the term “labor
    services” or its limits, and their attempt to draw in their alleged conduct as being “related to” labor
    has no basis in the Act’s provisions. The Act merely provides that individual labor is not a service,
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    No. 1-21-0840
    so that otherwise anticompetitive action restraining individual labor is permissible. It does not
    provide that the exemption extends to services like those provided by staffing agencies that are
    “related to” labor, whatever that may mean.
    ¶ 18   The Agency Defendants point to federal court cases purportedly reaching a different
    conclusion, but we find those cases unhelpful to the Agency Defendants’ position. The primary
    case upon which they rely is O'Regan v. Arbitration Forums, Inc., 
    121 F.3d 1060
     (7th Cir. 1997).
    There, an employee was terminated for refusing to sign a noncompetition agreement. Id. at 1063.
    She brought both federal and Illinois antitrust claims against her former employer, arguing that the
    noncompetition agreement “restrained trade by binding employees.” Id. at 1065. The Seventh
    Circuit held that the employee lacked standing to bring her state-law claim, stating, without any
    further explanation, “to the extent [the employee’s] claims relate to an alleged market for labor
    services, they are specifically excluded by § 10/4 of the Act, which states that ‘ “[s]ervice” shall
    not be deemed to include labor which is performed by natural persons as employees of others.’ ”
    Id. at 1066 (emphasis added).
    ¶ 19   The Agency Defendants appear to latch onto this use of the term “labor services” and
    attempt to position their work within it. However, the context of O’Regan makes clear that the
    “labor services” at issue in that case was not the type of labor services that the Agency Defendants
    provide. O’Regan concerned an employer’s attempt to restrain an employee’s individual labor
    through a noncompetition agreement. Thus, the “alleged market for labor services” that was the
    target of the alleged anticompetitive conduct in O’Regan was the market for the employee’s own
    individual labor. Accordingly, O’Regan’s holding that a former employee could not bring an
    Illinois antitrust claim related to an alleged restraint on her individual labor is entirely consistent
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    No. 1-21-0840
    with our reading of the plain language of section 4’s second definition of “service” as allowing
    such a restraint, and it does not support the Agency Defendants’ position that the labor addressed
    in section 4 extends to the services they provide.
    ¶ 20   The Agency Defendants also cite Deslandes v. McDonald's USA, LLC, 17 C 4857, 
    2018 WL 3105955
     (N.D. Ill. June 25, 2018), which concerned an agreement between McDonald’s stores
    not to hire each other’s employees. 
    Id.
     at *2–3. An employee who was barred from transferring
    between franchises brought claims under the Act, asserting that the no-hire agreements artificially
    suppressed her wage. 
    Id.
     at *8–9. The district court affirmed the denial of her claims, citing
    O’Regan for the proposition that the Act excludes claims related to a market for labor services. Id.
    at *9. However, as in O’Regan, the so-called “labor services” that were allegedly restrained in
    Deslandes were the employee’s own individual labor, a different type of would-be service than the
    hiring and managing services provided by temporary staffing agencies.
    ¶ 21   The Deslandes court also seemingly suggested that the labor referenced in section 4 of the
    Act is different from the labor exception contained in section 5, stating, “[a]lthough plaintiff
    suggests [that the exclusion of labor from the definition of “service” in section 4] is merely an
    exception for collective bargaining, the statute includes a separate labor exemption.” Id. As did the
    circuit court, we find this limited analysis unpersuasive, and we disagree with the Deslandes
    court’s apparent conclusion that the labor exception in section 5 and the exclusion of labor from
    the definition of “service” in section 4 must have different purposes. To the contrary, they are
    consistent with each other, and lawmakers are entitled to take a “belt and suspenders” approach to
    legislative drafting and cover the same issue in more than one place to avoid potential confusion
    over a possible conflict between the provisions. Cf. Hively v. Ivy Tech Community College of
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    No. 1-21-0840
    Indiana, 
    853 F.3d 339
    , 344 (7th Cir. 2017) (recognizing that “Congress may certainly choose to
    use both a belt and suspenders to achieve its objectives”). Indeed, the Bar Committee Comments
    to section 5 expressly observe that the labor provisions of sections 4 and 5 should be read together.
    See 740 ILCS 10/5 Bar Comm. Cmts.-1967 (West 2018).
    ¶ 22    Thus, contrary to the Agency Defendants’ arguments, the exclusion of labor from the
    definition of “service” in section 4 is primarily concerned with restraints on the individual labor
    of natural persons for the purpose of allowing employees and management to engage in collective
    bargaining and related activities. We do not see any language in the Act extending that protection
    to the hiring and managing services provided by temporary staffing agencies, which are not natural
    persons performing labor for an employer. 2
    ¶ 23    Therefore, we answer the first certified question by holding that, to the extent that the
    alleged unlawful conduct concerns restraints that they place on their own services (i.e., recruiting,
    hiring, and managing temporary employees) and do not concern restraints on a natural person’s
    individual labor, temporary staffing agencies like the Agency Defendants in this case are subject
    to the Act’s provisions, and in particular section 3’s prohibitions on anticompetitive restraints on
    services.
    ¶ 24    We turn, then, to the second certified question: “Whether the per se rule under Section 3(1)
    of the [Act], 740 ILCS 10/3(1), which states that it applies to conspiracies among ‘competitor[s],’
    extends to alleged horizontal agreements facilitated by a vertical noncompetitor.” We believe that
    2
    We note that our comments on this issue should not be read to express an opinion that collective
    bargaining and related conduct are the only types of activities covered by the exclusion of individual labor
    from the definition of “service” in section 4 of the Act. That issue is not before us. Rather, our opinion in
    this case is limited to that provision’s inapplicability to the type of services provided by temporary
    staffing agencies.
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    No. 1-21-0840
    the answer to that question is that it depends not on the presence of a vertically situated party, but
    rather on the nature of the agreement and the conduct at issue. Even when there is a vertical element
    to an otherwise horizontal agreement, such an agreement can receive per se treatment when it is a
    naked anticompetitive conspiracy. However, it should be examined under the rule of reason when
    the conduct at issue is ancillary to a legitimate procompetitive agreement.
    ¶ 25   Unlike the first certified question, the plain language of the Act does not clearly provide
    an answer to this question. The provision at issue is subsection 3(1) of the Act, which makes it
    unlawful to “[m]ake any contract with, or engage in any combination or conspiracy with, any other
    person who is, or but for a prior agreement would be, a competitor of such person” for delineated
    anticompetitive purposes or with particular anticompetitive effects. 740 ILCS 10/3(1) (West 2018).
    Violations of this subsection are commonly referred to as “per se” offenses and are “deemed to
    constitute the most serious restraints upon competition.” 
    Id.
     Bar Comm. Cmts.-1967. “The conduct
    proscribed by Section 3(1) is violative of the Act without regard to, and the courts need not
    examine, the competitive and economic purposes and consequences of such conduct.” 
    Id.
     As a
    general matter, subsection 3(1) is only applied to horizontal agreements between competitors and
    “does not reach vertical agreements, such as agreements between buyers and sellers fixing the
    price at which the buyer shall resell.” 
    Id.
    ¶ 26   The State in this case brings both of its claims against the defendants under subsection 3(1),
    alleging two horizontal agreements constituting per se violations of the Act. However, the
    defendants contend that their alleged no-poaching and wage-fixing agreements are not purely
    horizontal in nature and instead contain a vertical element, removing them from consideration
    under subsection 3(1), which only applies to agreements with a “competitor.” Instead, they argue
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    that the State’s claims must be considered under subsection 3(2) of the Act (740 ILCS 10/3(2)
    (West 2018)). 3
    ¶ 27    Subsection 3(2) more generally prohibits “one or more other persons” from “unreasonably
    restrain[ing] trade or commerce.” 740 ILCS 10/3(2) (West 2018). Rather than applying a per se
    approach, subsection 3(2) uses the “rule of reason” to “examine the competitive and economic
    purposes and consequences of such arrangements for the purpose of determining whether or not
    trade or commerce has been unreasonably restrained.” 
    Id.
     Bar Comm. Cmts.-1967.
    ¶ 28    While Illinois courts have not yet weighed in on the question presented, the supreme court
    has noted that subsection 3(1) of the Act is “patterned after section 1 of the Sherman Act * * * ,
    and in our construction of the Illinois Antitrust Act we are guided by Federal case law construing
    analogous provisions of Federal legislation.” People ex rel. Scott v. College Hills Corp., 
    91 Ill. 2d 138
    , 150 (1982) (citations omitted); see also 740 ILCS 10/11 (West 2018) (“When the wording of
    this Act is identical or similar to that of a federal antitrust law, the courts of this State shall use the
    construction of the federal law by the federal courts as a guide in construing this Act.”); Baker v.
    Jewel Food Stores, Inc., 
    355 Ill. App. 3d 62
    , 69 (1st Dist. 2005) (“Section 3(1) is patterned after
    section 1 of the Sherman Act.”). We therefore take instruction from federal court decisions to the
    extent that they are consistent with the Act’s provisions.
    ¶ 29    An analysis of this issue begins with a preliminary determination of the type of restraint at
    issue as either horizontal or vertical. “A horizontal restraint is ‘an agreement among competitors
    on the way in which they will compete with one another.’ ” Aya Healthcare Services, Inc. v. AMN
    3
    In its separate brief, Colony argues that for the same reason it should be dismissed from this
    case. However, that issue is beyond the scope of the questions presented, so we will not address it.
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    Healthcare, Inc., 
    9 F.4th 1102
    , 1108 (9th Cir. 2021) (quoting NCAA v. Board of Regents, 
    468 U.S. 85
    , 99 (1984)). “Vertical restraints are ‘restraints imposed by agreement between firms at different
    levels of distribution.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting Ohio v. American Express Co., 
    138 S. Ct. 2274
    , 2284 (2018)).
    The Agency Defendants contend that Colony’s involvement in and facilitation of the alleged
    conspiracies renders the agreements vertical in nature, or at least removes the alleged conspiracies
    from the per se category. However, the analysis of this issue is nuanced, and the classification
    ultimately depends on the conduct at issue.
    ¶ 30   Federal case law makes clear that a vertical party’s coordination of a horizontal restraint
    among competitors does not necessarily transform the otherwise horizontal restraint into a vertical
    one. In Toys "R" Us, Inc. v. F.T.C., 
    221 F.3d 928
     (7th Cir. 2000), toy retailer Toys “R” Us (“TRU”)
    orchestrated an agreement among its largest manufacturers to restrict the distribution of their
    products to warehouse clubs that were competing against TRU. Id. at 930. The Seventh Circuit
    held that, even though the conspiracy consisted of a series of individual vertical agreements
    between each manufacturer and TRU, evidence that the manufacturers only agreed to TRU’s
    desired restrictions on the condition that their competitors would do the same made the conspiracy
    horizontal in nature and allowed for a finding of a per se violation. Id. at 935–36. The key
    consideration was evidence of concerted anticompetitive behavior by competitors, regardless of
    the presence or participation of a vertical party. Id.; accord United States v. Apple, Inc., 
    791 F.3d 290
    , 325 (2d Cir. 2015) (holding that a horizontal conspiracy existed despite the coordination and
    participation of a vertical party); Denny's Marina, Inc. v. Renfro Productions, Inc., 
    8 F.3d 1217
    ,
    1220 (7th Cir. 1993) (holding that the participation of a noncompetitor did not transform a
    horizontal price-fixing agreement among competitors into a vertical agreement). Thus, the
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    defendants’ contention that a vertical party’s involvement necessarily precludes application of per
    se review is incorrect.
    ¶ 31   However, while horizontal restraints are typically analyzed under the per se standard (Aya
    Healthcare, 9 F.4th at 1109) that is not always the case. “Under the ‘ancillary restraints’ doctrine,
    a horizontal agreement is ‘exempt from the per se rule,’ and analyzed under the rule-of-reason, if
    it meets two requirements.” Id. (quoting Rothery Storage & Van Co. v. Atlas Van Lines, Inc., 
    792 F.2d 210
    , 224 (D.C. Cir. 1986)).
    “These requirements are that the restraint must be (1) ‘subordinate and collateral to a
    separate, legitimate transaction,’ Rothery Storage, 
    792 F.2d at 224
    , and (2) ‘reasonably
    necessary’ to achieving that transaction's pro-competitive purpose, United States v.
    Addyston Pipe & Steel Co., 
    85 F. 271
    , 281 (6th Cir. 1898), aff'd, 
    175 U.S. 211
    , 
    20 S. Ct. 96
    , 
    44 L.Ed. 136
     (1899); see also [L.A. Memorial Coliseum Commission v. National
    Football League, 
    726 F.2d 1381
    , 1395 (9th Cir. 1984)] (‘[T]he doctrine teaches that some
    agreements which restrain competition may be valid if they are “subordinate and collateral
    to another legitimate transaction and necessary to make that transaction effective.” ’
    (citation omitted)).
    ‘Naked restraints’ are categorically not ‘ancillary restraints.’ Rothery Storage, 
    792 F.2d at
    224 n.10. Thus, naked horizontal restraints are always analyzed under the per se
    standard. A restraint is naked if it has ‘no purpose except stifling of competition.’ White
    Motor Co. v. United States, 
    372 U.S. 253
    , 263, 
    83 S. Ct. 696
    , 
    9 L.Ed.2d 738
     (1963). Some
    examples of these restraints include agreements among actual or potential competitors to
    fix prices, e.g., Catalano, Inc. v. Target Sales, Inc., 
    446 U.S. 643
    , 647, 
    100 S. Ct. 1925
    , 64
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    No. 1-21-
    0840 L.Ed.2d 580
     (1980) (per curiam); rig bids, e.g., [United States v. Joyce, 
    895 F.3d 673
    , 677
    (9th Cir. 2018)]; or divide markets, e.g., Palmer v. BRG of Georgia., Inc., 
    498 U.S. 46
    , 49–
    50, 
    111 S. Ct. 401
    , 
    112 L.Ed.2d 349
     (1990) (per curiam).”
    Aya Healthcare, 9 F.4th at 1109.
    ¶ 32   Aya Healthcare provides an example of the type of horizontal restraint that should receive
    rule-of-reason consideration. There, a temporary staffing company, AMN Healthcare, Inc., was
    struggling to provide enough labor to meets its clients’ needs. Id. at 1106. To help satisfy that
    demand, it contracted with other staffing companies, including Aya Healthcare Services, Inc., to
    provide additional labor. Id. AMN’s contract with Aya prohibited Aya from soliciting AMN’s
    employees. Id. When Aya broke that covenant and began soliciting AMN’s employees, the parties
    ended their relationship, and Aya then sued AMN for antitrust violations. Id.
    ¶ 33   After first finding that the parties’ contract was a horizontal agreement between would-be
    competitors, the Ninth Circuit explained that “the threshold question on appeal is whether the
    restraint in this case is naked or ancillary, and in turn, whether it is per se unlawful or subject to
    the rule-of-reason, respectively.” Id. at 1109. The court concluded that the non-solicitation restraint
    was ancillary because it was “reasonably necessary to the parties' procompetitive collaboration.
    The purpose of the parties' contract was to supply hospitals with traveling nurses. The non-
    solicitation agreement is necessary to achieving that end because it ensures that AMN will not lose
    its personnel during the collaboration.” Id. at 1110. The court further explained, “[t]he non-
    solicitation agreement * * * promotes ‘competitiveness in the healthcare staffing industry’—more
    hospitals receive more traveling nurses because the non-solicitation agreement allows AMN to
    give spillover assignments to Aya without endangering its ‘establish[ed] network[] [of] recruiters,
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    No. 1-21-0840
    travel nurses, AVs, and of course, hospital customers.’ ” Id. (ellipses added, brackets in original)
    (quoting Aya Healthcare Services, Inc. v. AMN Healthcare, Inc., --- F. Supp. 3d ----, ----, 
    2020 WL 2553181
    , at *1 (S.D. Cal. May 20, 2020)). The court therefore concluded that the restraint
    was ancillary in nature and reviewed under the rule of reason. 
    Id.
    ¶ 34   With this guidance, we return to the circuit court’s second certified question: “Whether the
    per se rule under Section 3(1) of the [Act], 740 ILCS 10/3(1), which states that it applies to
    conspiracies among ‘competitor[s],’ extends to alleged horizontal agreements facilitated by a
    vertical noncompetitor.” We answer this question by holding that the classification of a conspiracy
    as horizontal or vertical is not determined by the presence of a vertically situated party, but rather
    by the existence or absence of concerted horizontal action, and whether the per se rule applies to
    such a horizontal conspiracy depends on whether the restraint at issue is naked or ancillary, with
    per se consideration given to the former and the rule of reason applied to the latter.
    ¶ 35   Certified questions answered; cause remanded.
    - 16 -
    No. 1-21-0840
    No. 1-21-0840
    The State of Illinois, by the Attorney General, Kwame Raoul, Plaintiff-
    Cite as:                         Appellee v. Elite Staffing, Inc., Metro Staff, Inc., Midway Staffing, Inc.
    and Colony Display, LLC, Defendants-Appellants.
    Decision Under Review:           Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, Nos. 20 CH 5156
    Honorable Raymond Mitchell, Judge, presiding.
    Appellants Attorneys:
    MCGUIREWOODS LLP               SMITHAMUNDSEN LLC
    Amy B. Manning                 John R. Hayes
    77 West Wacker                 150 N. Michigan Avenue
    Suite 4100                     Suite 3300
    Chicago, Illinois 60601        Chicago, Illinois 60601
    Telephone: (312) 849-8100      Telephone: (312) 894-3200 Firm
    Attorneys for Elite Staffing   Attorneys for Midway Staffing
    The Fish Law Firm
    David J. Fish
    200 E. 5th Ave
    Suite 123
    Naperville, Illinois 60563
    Telephone: (630) 355-7590
    Attorneys for Metro Staff
    Scott Mendelhoff, Gabriel Aizenberg, David S. Repking, Brian D. Straw
    Greenburg Taurig LLP,
    77 W. Wacker Dr., Suite 3100
    Chicago, IL 60601
    Telephone: (312) 456-8400
    Attorneys for Colony Display LLC
    John J. Cullerton Patrick Morales-Doyle Thompson Coburn LLP 55 East Monroe Street, 37th
    Floor Chicago, Illinois 60603 Telephone No.: 312.346.7500 – Amicus Brief for Staffing
    Services Association of Illinois
    Eric A. Posner 5611 S. Blackstone Ave. Chicago, Illinois 60637 Telephone No.: 773-633-3834
    – Amicus Brief for Eric A. Posner
    - 17 -
    No. 1-21-0840
    Ada Sandoval Mark H. Birhanu Legal Department Raise the Floor Alliance 1 N. LaSalle
    Street, Suite 1275 Chicago, IL 60602 (312) 795-9115 – Amicus Brief for Raise the Floor
    Alliance
    Attorneys for Appellee:
    KWAME RAOUL Attorney General State of Illinois; Priyanka Gupta PRIYANKA GUPTA
    Assistant Attorney General 100 West Randolph Street 12th Floor Chicago, Illinois 60601
    (312) 814-2109 (
    llee Attorney:
    - 18 -
    No. 1-21-0840
    - 19 -