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No. 10591530
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
pharmacychecker.com LLC v. Legitscript LLC
No. 10591530 · Decided May 23, 2025
No. 10591530·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
May 23, 2025
Citation
No. 10591530
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM No. 24-2697
LLC,
D.C. No.
3:22-cv-00252-SI
Plaintiff - Appellee,
v.
OPINION
LEGITSCRIPT LLC,
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Oregon
Michael H. Simon, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 3, 2025
Portland, Oregon
Filed May 23, 2025
Before: Carlos T. Bea, Lucy H. Koh, and Jennifer Sung,
Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Bea
2 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
SUMMARY *
Antitrust Standing
The panel affirmed the district court’s order denying
defendant LegitScript LLC’s motion for summary judgment
based on lack of standing in an antitrust action brought by
PharmacyChecker.com LLC.
PharmacyChecker alleged that its competitor LegitScript
engaged in a group boycott in violation of antitrust
laws. LegitScript moved for summary judgment,
contending that PharmacyChecker lacked antitrust standing
because its business facilitated the illegal importation of
foreign drugs and, accordingly, it could not suffer any
legally cognizable injury under Section 4 of the Clayton Act.
The panel held that LegitScript’s argument was
foreclosed by Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit
precedent. Championing a public policy in favor of private
antitrust enforcement, the Supreme Court in Kiefer-Stewart
Co. v. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., 340 U.S. 211 (1951),
and Perma Life Mufflers, Inc. v. Int’l Parts Corp., 392 U.S.
134 (1968), held that, in general, neither the equitable
defense of in pari delicto not that of unclean hands can act
as a complete bar to lawsuits brought under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act. In Calnetics Corp. v. Volkswagen of America,
Inc., 532 F.2d 674 (9th Cir. 1976), this court held that an
injury to the fruits of a plaintiff’s illegal conduct can confer
antitrust standing. Memorex Corp. v. IBM, 555 F.2d 1379
(9th Cir. 1977), confirmed that a plaintiff can suffer a legally
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 3
cognizable injury when competing in a legitimate market,
even if the injury is inflicted upon a business or property
interest that has been obtained through the plaintiff’s
unlawful conduct. The panel concluded that here, based on
the record at the summary judgment stage, the business
interests that PharmacyChecker sought to protect were not
meaningfully different from those of the plaintiffs in
Calnetics and Memorex, even assuming that
PharmacyChecker’s alleged facilitation of unlawful foreign
drug importation was itself illegal.
COUNSEL
Aaron R. Gott (argued), Bona Law PC, Minneapolis,
Minnesota; Philip S. Van Der Weele, K&L Gates LLP,
Portland, Oregon; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Richard P. Sybert (argued) and Holly L.K. Heffner, Gordon
Rees Skully Mansukhani LLP, Portland, Oregon, for
Defendant-Appellant.
4 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
OPINION
BEA, Circuit Judge:
Two wrongs don’t make a right. Nor do they necessarily
cancel each other out. In this case, PharmacyChecker.com
LLC (“PharmacyChecker”) sued its competitor LegitScript
LLC (“LegitScript”) for engaging in a group boycott in
violation of antitrust laws. LegitScript moved for summary
judgment, contending that PharmacyChecker lacked
antitrust standing because PharmacyChecker’s business
facilitated illegal activities and, accordingly, it could not
suffer any legally cognizable injury under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act. The district court denied LegitScript’s motion
and certified an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1292(b). We affirm. Following the Supreme Court’s
teachings and the precedents in this Circuit, we must hold
that, to further the public policy in favor of vigorous antitrust
enforcement, a plaintiff may have antitrust standing under
Section 4 of the Clayton Act to sue for injuries suffered by
its business or property interest when competing in a
legitimate market, even if such business or property interest
has been attained by unlawful means.
I.
A. 1
The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (“FFDCA”)
prohibits the “introduction or delivery for introduction into
1
The parties here did not independently produce below any evidence
regarding PharmacyChecker’s antitrust standing; instead, they submitted
and relied on certain filings from a related case before the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of New York. The district court in this
case accepted these filings, upon which we base the factual recitation
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 5
interstate commerce” of any drug that is adulterated,
misbranded, or not approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (“FDA”). 21 U.S.C. §§ 331(a), 331(d),
355(a); see also In re Canadian Imp. Antitrust Litig., 470
F.3d 785, 788–89 (8th Cir. 2006) (noting that personal
importation of foreign drugs into the United States can
violate the FFDCA either “because the drugs are not
approved in accordance with 21 U.S.C. § 355, are not
labeled as required by 21 U.S.C. § 352, or are dispensed
without a valid prescription in contravention of 21 U.S.C.
§ 353(b)(1)”).
It is illegal in “most circumstances” “for individuals to
import drugs” into the United States “for personal use
because these products purchased from other countries often
have not been approved by the FDA for use and sale in” the
United States. Personal Importation, U.S. FOOD & DRUG
ADMIN., https://www.fda.gov/industry/import-
basics/personal-importation (last updated Oct. 8, 2024). The
FDA “may consider a more permissive decision” in
“allowing the importation of medications for personal use”
if, for instance, the drug “is not for treatment of a serious
condition and there is no known significant health risk,” or
if the drug “is for a serious condition for which effective
treatment may not be available domestically either through
commercial or clinical means.” Id. And foreign nationals
who vacation, study, or work in the United States may also
ship to themselves as much as a 90-day supply of drugs for
personal use; if they stay in the United States for more than
here concerning PharmacyChecker. We view the facts stated in these
filings in the light most favorable to PharmacyChecker, the nonmovant.
6 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
90 days, they may have additional medications shipped to
them. 2 Id.
Against this backdrop, PharmacyChecker operates the
PharmacyChecker.com website. The website is not a
pharmacy; it does not “buy, sell, distribute, dispense, or
process orders for” any drugs. Rather, it accredits online
pharmacies across the globe for their safety standards, and it
compares the prices of the drugs offered by those pharmacies
for its website users from around the world. According to
PharmacyChecker, its “central objective has been to
examine the qualifications (i.e., practice and safety
standards) of online pharmacies wherever they might be to
provide worldwide visitors with information to make good
choices, to be safe, and to get medication most affordably.”
PharmacyChecker’s business model depends on
charging online pharmacies verification fees and click-
through fees. 3 From January 2015 through August 2021
(“Relevant Period”), approximately 14% of
PharmacyChecker’s revenue came from verification fees,
which were charged to online pharmacies for services that
PharmacyChecker provided in accrediting those pharmacies
and listing them on its website. About 84% of the
verification fees that PharmacyChecker collected were paid
by foreign pharmacies.
2
The parties dispute whether other exceptions may apply. We need not
address this dispute because our decision here does not rest on its
resolution.
3
PharmacyChecker also provides discount cards for U.S. consumers to
purchase U.S. prescription drugs at U.S. pharmacies. However, the
record suggests that these discount cards accounted for only about 0.2%
of PharmacyChecker’s revenue.
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 7
In the Relevant Period, approximately 85% of
PharmacyChecker’s revenue came from click-through fees,
which PharmacyChecker charged its accredited pharmacies
whenever their hyperlinks on the PharmacyChecker.com
website were clicked. About 95% of PharmacyChecker’s
click-through revenue in the Relevant Period came from
online pharmacies located outside the United States;
approximately 69% of that revenue resulted from clicks
made by PharmacyChecker.com users located inside the
United States. This means around 56% of
PharmacyChecker’s total revenue in the Relevant Period
was generated from clicks made by PharmacyChecker.com
users inside the United States on hyperlinks for online
pharmacies outside the United States.
These click-through fees were charged to the pharmacies
solely based on the clicks made by PharmacyChecker.com
users. PharmacyChecker collected these fees irrespective of
whether its users ended up purchasing any drugs.
Accordingly, PharmacyChecker did not track its website
users’ activities after they clicked through to those
pharmacies’ websites and did not know how many of its U.S.
users purchased drugs from foreign pharmacies and had
them shipped into the United States. On this point, the
record consists of one online pharmacy’s deposition
testimony that only about 3.47% of the clicks from
PharmacyChecker.com resulted in a drug transaction. 4
4
LegitScript has proffered evidence that the “frequently asked
questions” section on PharmacyChecker.com explained how its U.S.
users could purchase medications from foreign pharmacies.
PharmacyChecker responds that, in that section, it answered questions
most frequently asked by its website users located worldwide. There is
also evidence suggesting that PharmacyChecker assisted U.S. consumers
with their purchases of drugs from its accredited foreign pharmacies.
8 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
B.
In August 2019, PharmacyChecker sued its competitor
LegitScript and other industry organizations (excluding
LegitScript, hereinafter “SDNY Defendants”) in the U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of New York (“New
York court”) for their alleged group boycott against
PharmacyChecker in violation of the Sherman Act and for
alleged false advertising by one of the SDNY Defendants in
violation of the Lanham Act (“SDNY Action”). 5
Specifically, PharmacyChecker alleged, inter alia, that the
SDNY Defendants (1) worked with LegitScript to have
“published articles disparaging” PharmacyChecker;
(2) colluded with LegitScript to have “created the
‘.pharmacy’ [internet] domain to serve a gatekeeping
function,” a domain which PharmacyChecker is presumably
ineligible to use; (3) added PharmacyChecker.com to their
“Not Recommended Sites list” or the like; and (4) “ran
targeted online ads against” PharmacyChecker. Further,
according to PharmacyChecker, one of the SDNY
Defendants caused Microsoft, a corporate member of that
SDNY Defendant, to set up a warning box on its search
engine which would appear whenever its users click on the
But PharmacyChecker received only about 20 inquiries per year for
assistance with an issue involving its accredited pharmacies. By way of
comparison, LegitScript’s expert concluded that PharmacyChecker
collected click-through fees “from approximately 7.5 million clicks”
over the Relevant Period.
5
LegitScript offers “verification and monitoring services for online
pharmacies.” It allegedly competes with PharmacyChecker “in the
pharmacy accreditation market.” SDNY Defendants include National
Association of Boards of Pharmacy, Alliance for Safe Online
Pharmacies, Partnership for Safe Medicines, and Center for Safe Internet
Pharmacies Ltd.
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 9
search results for webpages from PharmacyChecker.com.
Defendants’ conduct allegedly prevented PharmacyChecker
from competing effectively “in the global markets for online
pharmacy verification and comparative drug price
information.”
In March 2021, the New York court found that it lacked
personal jurisdiction over LegitScript, a limited liability
company organized under the laws of Oregon.
PharmacyChecker thus moved to sever its claim against
LegitScript and to transfer that claim to the U.S. District
Court for the District of Oregon (“Oregon Action”), and the
New York court granted that motion.
PharmacyChecker.com LLC v. LegitScript LLC, 614 F.
Supp. 3d 796, 803 (D. Or. 2022).
Meanwhile, the New York court denied SDNY
Defendants’ joint motion to dismiss and formulated the
following rule regarding antitrust injury: “[W]here the
plaintiff’s enterprise is completely or almost completely
illegal, or completely or almost completely geared towards
facilitating illegality, that plaintiff cannot plead an antitrust
injury.” Applying this rule, the New York court declined to
dismiss PharmacyChecker’s antitrust claim in the SDNY
Action for want of antitrust standing because the pleadings
did not establish PharmacyChecker’s complete or almost
complete involvement in illegal activities or the facilitation
thereof.
The SDNY Action then moved forward. In March 2023,
the New York court granted SDNY Defendants summary
judgment as to PharmacyChecker’s antitrust claim, holding
that PharmacyChecker lacked antitrust standing. The New
York court found it “clear” that PharmacyChecker directed
“U.S. consumers to foreign pharmacies where they [could]
10 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
purchase prescription medication in violation of federal
law,” and that PharmacyChecker “described this facilitation
as its mission ‘to help consumers afford medication they
need[ed].’” As such, the court concluded that
PharmacyChecker was “completely or almost completely
geared towards facilitating illegality” and, accordingly,
lacked a cognizable antitrust injury. Pursuant to Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b), the parties in the SDNY
Action jointly requested that the New York court enter a
partial final judgment on this decision so that
PharmacyChecker could appeal it. PharmacyChecker.com
LLC v. Nat’l Ass’n of Bds. of Pharmacy, No. 19-CV-7577,
2023 WL 4492148, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. June 5, 2023). The New
York court denied that request. Id. The SDNY Action thus
proceeded to discovery on PharmacyChecker’s non-antitrust
claim.
In June 2023, LegitScript moved for summary judgment
in the Oregon Action, contending that (1) issue preclusion
barred PharmacyChecker’s antitrust claim because the New
York court had found PharmacyChecker lacked antitrust
standing; and that, even absent issue preclusion,
(2) PharmacyChecker lacked antitrust standing under Ninth
Circuit law. 6 In January 2024, Judge Michael H. Simon,
presiding over the Oregon Action, denied LegitScript
summary judgment.
Regarding issue preclusion, Judge Simon held that the
New York court’s decision did not bar PharmacyChecker’s
claim in the Oregon Action because (1) the New York
court’s decision was not sufficiently firm to have a
6
PharmacyChecker did not assert a false advertising claim in the Oregon
Action as it did in the SDNY Action. PharmacyChecker, 614 F. Supp.
3d at 802 n.1.
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 11
preclusive effect; (2) the parties in the SDNY Action had not
been given an opportunity to appeal; and (3) the Second and
Ninth Circuits’ precedents differ on the relevant legal
question. On appeal, LegitScript does not challenge this
portion of Judge Simon’s ruling.
As to PharmacyChecker’s antitrust standing, Judge
Simon—viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
PharmacyChecker—concluded that “PharmacyChecker’s
business [was] legal.” Judge Simon observed that
“LegitScript ha[d] identified no federal or state law that
PharmacyChecker ha[d] violated.” “Nor ha[d] LegitScript
pointed to any instance of a federal or state law enforcement
agency prosecuting or even threatening to prosecute
PharmacyChecker, or any instance of a federal or state
regulatory body taking or even threatening to take any action
against PharmacyChecker (e.g., by issuing a cease-and-
desist order).” “Nor, for that matter, ha[d] LegitScript
shown that visitors to PharmacyChecker’s website—
including those visitors who click[ed] on links to non-U.S.
pharmacies—engage[d] in illegal activity simply by using
PharmacyChecker’s website.” At most, found Judge Simon,
LegitScript could be said to have proffered evidence
establishing “that some number of U.S. visitors to
PharmacyChecker’s website appear[ed] to have violated
federal law through cross-border purchase and import of
prescription drugs for personal use and that
PharmacyChecker’s website facilitate[d] that illegal
activity.”
Accordingly, Judge Simon framed the controlling
question for LegitScript’s motion for summary judgment as
follows: “[W]hether an antitrust plaintiff, which does not
itself engage in illegal activity, lacks antitrust standing
merely because that plaintiff’s website facilitates illegal
12 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
activity by others and the plaintiff receives revenue as an
indirect result of that activity.” Judge Simon answered this
question in the negative and denied LegitScript summary
judgment.
LegitScript moved to certify Judge Simon’s order for
interlocutory appeal. Granting that motion, Judge Simon
certified the following questions:
(1) Might a plaintiff’s facilitation of unlawful
activity by others bar antitrust standing under
some circumstances? (2) If so, is there a
minimum threshold of facilitation of
unlawful activity by others, measured in
some appropriate fashion considering the
plaintiff’s entire range of business activities,
for the bar to antitrust standing to be
triggered?
LegitScript timely applied for this Court’s permission to
appeal, which application we granted.
II.
“Antitrust standing is a question of law reviewed de
novo.” Am. Ad Mgmt., Inc. v. Gen. Tel. Co. of California,
190 F.3d 1051, 1054 (9th Cir. 1999). We also review de
novo a district court’s decision denying summary judgment.
Horton by Horton v. City of Santa Maria, 915 F.3d 592, 606
(9th Cir. 2019). “[V]iewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the non-movant,” we must determine “whether
there are any genuine issues of material fact and whether the
district court correctly applied the relevant substantive law.”
Soc. Techs. LLC v. Apple Inc., 4 F.4th 811, 816 (9th Cir.
2021) (citation omitted).
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 13
Before us is the district court’s denial of summary
judgment for LegitScript on two grounds:
(1) PharmacyChecker’s claim in this case is not precluded
by the New York court’s ruling that PharmacyChecker
lacked antitrust standing; and (2) antitrust standing is not
lacking under the laws of the Ninth Circuit. As the parties
do not challenge Judge Simon’s first ruling rejecting issue
preclusion as a defense to PharmacyChecker’s claim, we
deal only with his second ruling concerning whether
PharmacyChecker has antitrust standing.
III.
Section 4 of the Clayton Act provides that “any person
who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of
anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue therefor”
and “shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained.”
15 U.S.C. § 15(a). Congress has thereby created a group of
“private attorneys general” to incentivize the enforcement of
the U.S. antitrust laws. Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, 431 U.S.
720, 746 (1977).
LegitScript argues that PharmacyChecker has no legal
right in running a business that facilitates the illegal
importation of foreign drugs and, accordingly, it did not
suffer any legally cognizable injury under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act. This argument fails, as it is foreclosed by this
Circuit’s binding precedents in Calnetics Corp. v.
Volkswagen of America, Inc., 532 F.2d 674 (9th Cir. 1976)
(per curiam), and Memorex Corp. v. IBM, 555 F.2d 1379
(9th Cir. 1977), which closely followed the Supreme Court’s
teachings in Kiefer-Stewart Co. v. Joseph E. Seagram &
Sons, Inc., 340 U.S. 211 (1951), and Perma Life Mufflers,
14 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
Inc. v. International Parts Corp., 392 U.S. 134 (1968). 7 We
discuss these binding precedents below.
A.
Championing a public policy in favor of private antitrust
enforcement, the Supreme Court in Kiefer-Stewart and
Perma Life declared that, in general, neither the equitable
defense of in pari delicto nor that of unclean hands can act
as a complete bar to lawsuits brought under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act: 8
[T]he purposes of the antitrust laws are best
served by insuring that the private action will
7
Both Kiefer-Stewart and Perma Life were partially overruled by
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., when the Supreme
Court held that a parent company is legally incapable of conspiring with
its wholly owned subsidiary in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act.
467 U.S. 752, 758–59, 777 (1984). In Copperweld, the Court overruled
its prior decisions, including Kiefer-Stewart and Perma Life, “to the
extent” they had suggested otherwise. Id. at 777. Kiefer-Stewart and
Perma Life were not overruled in their entirety because the determination
that a parent company and its wholly owned subsidiary could conspire
in violation of antitrust laws was not necessary to the disposition of either
case. Id. at 764–66; see also, e.g., Epic Games, Inc. v. Apple, Inc., 67
F.4th 946, 982 (9th Cir. 2023) (citing Perma Life); SD3, LLC v. Black &
Decker (U.S.) Inc., 801 F.3d 412, 426 (4th Cir. 2015) (citing Kiefer-
Stewart).
8
The defense of in pari delicto provides that a plaintiff who participates
in a wrongdoing may not recover damages resulting from the same
wrongdoing. See Memorex, 555 F.2d at 1382. The defense of unclean
hands deals with a “plaintiff’s wrongdoing against a third party with
respect to the [same] subject matter of” the plaintiff’s suit. Id. Notably,
the doctrine of in pari delicto did not disappear from private antitrust
actions altogether. Courts have applied this doctrine when a plaintiff and
a defendant are equally at fault for the alleged antitrust conspiracy, such
that “the illegal conspiracy would not have been formed but for the
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 15
be an ever-present threat to deter anyone
contemplating business behavior in violation
of the antitrust laws. The plaintiff who reaps
the reward of treble damages may be no less
morally reprehensible than the defendant, but
the law encourages his suit to further the
overriding public policy in favor of
competition. A more fastidious regard for the
relative moral worth of the parties would only
result in seriously undermining the
usefulness of the private action as a bulwark
of antitrust enforcement. And permitting the
plaintiff to recover a windfall gain does not
encourage continued violations by those in
his position since they remain fully subject to
civil and criminal penalties for their own
illegal conduct.
Perma Life, 392 U.S. at 139; see also Kiefer-Stewart, 340
U.S. at 214 (“If [the plaintiff] and others were guilty of
infractions of the antitrust laws, they could be held
responsible in appropriate proceedings brought against them
by the Government or by injured private persons. The
alleged illegal conduct of [the plaintiff], however, could not
legalize the unlawful combination by [the defendants] nor
immunize them against liability to those they injured.”). Our
Circuit applied these teachings in Calnetics, 532 F.2d 674,
and Memorex, 555 F.2d 1379.
In Calnetics, plaintiff Calnetics Corporation
(“Calnetics”), an independent manufacturer of automobile
plaintiff’s participation.” Javelin Corp. v. Uniroyal, Inc., 546 F.2d 276,
279 (9th Cir. 1976).
16 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
air conditioning equipment, alleged that the acquisition by
Volkswagen of America, Inc. (“Volkswagen”) of a
manufacturer of similar air conditioning equipment would
enable Volkswagen to “coerce both its wholly owned and
indirectly controlled distributors and dealers to satisfy their
demand for automobile air conditioning equipment from [the
acquiree’s] supply, thus foreclosing sales opportunities of”
Calnetics and other independent manufacturers. 532 F.2d at
678–80. Calnetics sued for both damages and equitable
relief. Id. at 680. To prove damages, Calnetics sought to
introduce evidence of its historical sales figures, but the
district court held this evidence was inadmissible because
those historical sales resulted from a kickback agreement
that allegedly constituted commercial bribery in violation of
federal antitrust laws and California state laws. Id. at 680,
688. As Calnetics could not prove damages without this
evidence, the district court granted summary judgment
against Calnetics as to its antitrust claim. Id. at 688.
On appeal, the Calnetics panel disagreed and vacated the
summary judgment order. Id. at 690. The panel held that
Volkswagen’s evidentiary challenge to Calnetics’s historical
sales figures was “in effect an in pari delicto or ‘unclean
hands’ defense” and thus could not bar Calnetics’s antitrust
suit. Id. at 688; see also id. at 689 (“[D]efendants argue that
they are not challenging Calnetics’[s] right to bring an
antitrust action but merely its reliance on illegal sales for
proof of damages. Labels, however, are not controlling, and
we find no legitimate reason for distinguishing defendants’
‘illegal sales’ argument from the in pari delicto type of
defense struck down in Perma Life.” (footnotes and citation
omitted)). According to the panel, Calnetics could maintain
its suit against Volkswagen “even though the market
position from which Calnetics was displaced had been
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 17
attained only through illegal conduct.” Id. at 689. “To rule
otherwise would effectively frustrate the important public
policy underlining the antitrust laws: encouragement of
private antitrust suits in order to deter the illegal exercise of
market power.” Id.
As such, Calnetics established that an injury to the fruits
of a plaintiff’s illegal conduct can confer antitrust standing
under Section 4 of the Clayton Act. Granted, Calnetics
involved only an evidentiary dispute and only discrete sales
practices. But if there were any doubt about this principle of
antitrust standing after Calnetics, we confirmed it in
Memorex the following year.
In Memorex, plaintiffs Memorex Corporation and
several affiliates (“Memorex”), originally in the business of
selling magnetic recording tapes, tried to expand into the
market for disk storage devices, in which market they had to
compete with International Business Machines Corporation
(“IBM”). 555 F.2d at 1380. Memorex sued IBM for
perpetuating its purported monopoly in the disk storage
device market in violation of the U.S. antitrust laws. Id.
IBM asserted as an affirmative defense that Memorex owed
its entire business presence in the disk storage device market
to its unlawful misappropriation of IBM’s intellectual
property. Id. Memorex sought to strike this “unlawful
market presence” defense, arguing that it was precluded by
Calnetics. Br. of Appellees and Cross-Appellants at 12–16,
Memorex Corp. v. IBM, 555 F.2d 1379 (9th Cir. 1977) (Nos.
76-1887, 76-1898).
IBM responded that Calnetics was inapposite because
the “illegal conduct in Calnetics involved only selling
practices” and, in contrast, “Memorex would not have been
a competitor [to IBM] at all” but for its theft from IBM.
18 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
Reply Br. of Appellant on Antitrust Issues and Appellee’s
Br. on Res Judicata Issues at 3, Memorex Corp. v. IBM, 555
F.2d 1379 (9th Cir. 1977) (Nos. 76-1887, 76-1898). Like
LegitScript here, IBM attempted to distinguish Calnetics on
the ground that IBM’s “unlawful market presence” defense
was different from the defenses of in pari delicto and
unclean hands. Id.; Appellant’s Br. at 10–12, Memorex
Corp. v. IBM, 555 F.2d 1379 (9th Cir. 1977) (Nos. 76-1887,
76-1898). IBM argued that the plain text of Section 4 of the
Clayton Act barred Memorex from suing for injuries in a
business that was not “HIS” but was “stolen from” IBM.
Appellant’s Br. at 9–10, 12, Memorex Corp. v. IBM, 555
F.2d 1379 (9th Cir. 1977) (Nos. 76-1887, 76-1898)
(emphases in original).
The Memorex panel disagreed with IBM’s arguments
and instead found Calnetics “compelling.” Id. at 1381–83.
The panel observed IBM did not argue “that there was no
injury at all, but rather that the market position which
suffered injury was obtained through illegal means.” Id. at
1383. Under Calnetics, such alleged illegality did not bar
Memorex’s claim against IBM for its alleged antitrust
violations. Id. at 1382–83 (“Memorex’s own illegal conduct
did not divest it of an antitrust action. . . . The statutory
requirements for [its] suit are met. That is all that is
necessary.”). The Memorex panel reasoned that, in
Calnetics, “[w]ere it not for Calnetics’[s] allegedly illegal
conduct, it would not have suffered any injury because it
would not have sold any products to Volkswagen
distributors.” Id. at 1381–82 (emphases added). “All sales”
that were allegedly subject to injury resulted from
commercial bribery. Id. at 1382. “In effect,” Calnetics built
“an ‘illegal market presence’ much as IBM suggest[ed]
Memorex d[id].” Id. Accordingly, “[t]he ‘rights’ of
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 19
Calnetics were no greater than those of Memorex, even
assuming Memorex [had] stole[n] the patents from which its
products were made.” Id.
As such, Memorex confirmed that, under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act, a plaintiff can suffer a legally cognizable injury
when competing in a legitimate market, even if the injury is
inflicted upon a business or property interest that has been
obtained through the plaintiff’s unlawful conduct. 9 After all,
a plaintiff suing under Section 4 of the Clayton Act “is suing
not only in its own behalf, but as a ‘private attorney general’
representing the public interest.” Javelin Corp. v. Uniroyal,
Inc., 546 F.2d 276, 279–80 (9th Cir. 1976). “Congress
established the private remedy to enlist the public as
enforcers of the antitrust laws.” Id. at 280. “The courts
should encourage this function.” Id.
Of course, a plaintiff who sues under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act remains fully responsible for civil liabilities
and, if applicable, can be subject to criminal penalties for its
own illegal activities. See Perma Life, 392 U.S. at 139. But
the plaintiff’s illegality does not necessarily negate the
defendant’s liability to the plaintiff for antitrust violations.
Id. Nor does it defeat the public benefits that the plaintiff’s
private enforcement of antitrust laws brings. Id. Permitting
a perhaps imperfect plaintiff to sue under Section 4 of the
Clayton Act serves the best interest of the public—both the
plaintiff’s and the defendant’s wrongs can be accounted for,
9
We express no view as to whether Section 4 of the Clayton Act may or
may not recognize a plaintiff’s injuries suffered while competing in an
illegitimate market. This situation is present neither here nor in
Calnetics or Memorex. Here, PharmacyChecker and LegitScript
allegedly compete in the legitimate market of online pharmacy
accreditation. And LegitScript does not claim the alleged market for
providing comparative drug price information is illegal.
20 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
“instead of only one or neither.” First Beverages, Inc. of Las
Vegas v. Royal Crown Cola Co., 612 F.2d 1164, 1175 (9th
Cir. 1980).
In this case, based on the record at this summary
judgment stage, the business interests that PharmacyChecker
seeks to protect are not meaningfully different from those of
the plaintiffs in Calnetics and Memorex, even assuming
PharmacyChecker’s alleged facilitation of unlawful foreign
drug importation is itself illegal. Indeed, the
PharmacyChecker’s businesses that LegitScript claims to be
illegal are proportionally less than those claimed to be illegal
in Calnetics and Memorex. Here, the parties agree that only
about 56% of PharmacyChecker’s total revenue was
generated from clicks made by website visitors located
inside the United States on hyperlinks to pharmacies located
outside the United States, from whom medications could
presumably be purchased for shipment into the United
States. Evidence tends to establish that only about 3.47% of
these clicks resulted in actual drug transactions, which may
or may not be unlawful depending on the actual
circumstances underlying these transactions. For example,
as mentioned supra, it would generally be lawful for a
foreign national visiting the United States to ship himself a
90-day supply of medication for personal use. See Personal
Importation, U.S. FOOD & DRUG ADMIN.,
https://www.fda.gov/industry/import-basics/personal-
importation (last updated Oct. 8, 2024). LegitScript does not
claim that the mere operation or the mere use of the
PharmacyChecker.com website is illegal.
Based on this record, the teachings of the Supreme
Court, and the binding precedents in our Circuit, we hold that
PharmacyChecker is not denied antitrust standing under
Section 4 of the Clayton Act simply because evidence
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 21
suggests PharmacyChecker facilitated possibly unlawful
importation of foreign drugs by some number of its
customers. We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of
LegitScript’s motion for summary judgment. 10
B.
LegitScript attacks the application of Memorex in this
case from three angles. First, it contends that Memorex does
not apply where, as here, a plaintiff’s illegal conduct is not
directed against the defendant. It is true that the relevant
holding in Memorex was narrow: “[W]e hold that illegality
is not to be recognized as a defense to an antitrust action
when the illegal acts by the plaintiff are directed against the
defendant.” 555 F.2d at 1382. But we are bound not just by
the holding, but also the “reasoned consideration” “germane
to the eventual resolution,” of our precedents. United States
v. Johnson, 256 F.3d 895, 914 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc)
(Kozinski, J., concurring). And, in Memorex, such
“reasoned consideration” included the panel’s discussion of
why Calnetics was “compelling,” Memorex, 555 F.2d at
1381–82, and how Memorex’s private antitrust enforcement
would benefit competition in the relevant market
notwithstanding Memorex’s prior conduct violative of other
laws, id. at 1383.
To advance a narrow reading of Memorex, LegitScript
also cites footnote five of that opinion, which stated that if
“a plaintiff participates in an illegal conspiracy to restrain
10
Because this appeal arises from a denial of summary judgment sought
solely on the ground that PharmacyChecker lacked statutory antitrust
standing, we have no occasion to decide whether PharmacyChecker may
recover the damages suffered solely by the portion of its business interest
that may later be proven illegal. Cf. First Beverages, 612 F.2d at 1174–
75; Memorex, 555 F.2d at 1384 n.8; Calnetics, 532 F.2d at 689.
22 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
trade[,] an act not directed against the defendant[,] then his
conduct must be evaluated under different standards.” Id. at
1382 n.5. Memorex did not specify what those “different
standards” might be or when illegality might serve as a
defense. In our view, this footnote means that, when a
plaintiff participates in an illegal conspiracy not against but
alongside a defendant, the plaintiff may be divested of its
antitrust standing if the conspiracy would not have been
formed but for the plaintiff’s participation. Javelin Corp.,
546 F.2d at 279 (discussed in Memorex, 555 F.2d at 1383).
Properly read as such, this footnote does not change our
conclusion here. To the extent LegitScript argues that this
footnote implicitly bars private antitrust actions brought by
plaintiffs who have committed wrongdoing against third
parties, this argument fails in light of Kiefer-Stewart, 340
U.S. at 214, in which the plaintiff wholesaler allegedly
conspired with other wholesalers to fix downstream prices—
conduct not necessarily directed against the defendant
manufacturers—but was not therefore barred from its
antitrust action against the defendants. Br. for Resp’ts at 7–
8, Kiefer-Stewart Co. v. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc.,
340 U.S. 211 (2006) (No. 297), 1950 WL 78636, at *7–8.
Second, LegitScript argues that Memorex does not apply
where, as here, a plaintiff commits a public wrong. It is true
that Memorex referred to the public wrong of IBM’s antitrust
violation and contrasted it with the private wrong of
Memorex’s alleged illegal conduct. 555 F.2d at 1382–83.
But nothing in Memorex indicated that the panel was
somehow limiting its holding as LegitScript suggests. Nor
would such a limitation be consistent with the precedents
upon which Memorex relied. In Kiefer-Stewart, for
example, the plaintiff was alleged to have committed price-
fixing antitrust violations similar in kind but separate from
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 23
those committed by the defendants. 340 U.S. at 212, 214
(describing how the defendants allegedly conspired to sell
liquor only to wholesalers who would resell at prices below
a fixed maximum, while the plaintiff wholesaler allegedly
conspired with other wholesalers to resell liquor only at
prices above a fixed minimum). The Supreme Court in that
case did not weigh whose conduct was more reprehensible
before concluding that the plaintiff’s alleged illegal conduct
did not bar its antitrust suit against the defendants. Id. at
214; see also Perma Life, 392 U.S. at 138–39 (also involving
two public wrongs); Calnetics, 532 F.2d at 680 (same). As
the Supreme Court has cautioned, a “fastidious regard for the
relative moral worth of the parties would only result in
seriously undermining the usefulness of the private action as
a bulwark of antitrust enforcement.” Memorex, 555 F.2d at
1383 (quoting Perma Life, 392 U.S. at 139).
Finally, LegitScript maintains that Memorex does not
apply where, as here, a defendant cannot assert a
counterclaim against a plaintiff’s illegal conduct. Not true.
The Memorex panel did not hinge its conclusion on the
availability of a counterclaim. See id. at 1382 (noting that
its conclusion was “particularly true when”—not true only
when—“the defendant has other remedies available to
him”); id. at 1382–83 (explaining that a counterclaim to
offset damages and a challenge to Memorex’s antitrust
standing were distinct and different concepts). In fact, in
Memorex, IBM did not—and probably could not—
counterclaim against Memorex for the alleged
misappropriation of intellectual property. Id. at 1383 & n.6
(observing that such a counterclaim might have been barred
by res judicata due to IBM’s previous litigation with
Memorex).
24 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
IV.
Against the binding precedents of this Circuit,
LegitScript relies on a Seventh Circuit decision, Maltz v.
Sax, 134 F.2d 2 (7th Cir. 1943), and two district court
decisions in the Ninth Circuit, Modesto Irrigation Dist. v.
Pac. Gas & Elec. Co., 309 F. Supp. 2d 1156 (N.D. Cal.
2004), aff’d 158 F. App’x 807 (9th Cir. 2005) (unpublished);
Pearl Music Co. v. Recording Indus. Ass’n of Am., Inc., 460
F. Supp. 1060 (C.D. Cal. 1978). None of them bind us, nor
are they persuasive. We discuss them below.
A.
LegitScript first turns to the Seventh Circuit’s 82-year
old opinion in Maltz, 134 F.2d 2, which predated Kiefer-
Stewart and the attendant trend against the use of unclean
hands and in pari delicto defenses in antitrust cases, see
Calnetics, 532 F.2d at 689 n.23. 11 In Maltz, Benjamin
11
Maltz has never been recognized by our Circuit as a persuasive
authority on the dispositive issue here. It was cited by this Court only
once pre-Kiefer-Stewart for the proposition that a treble-damage suit
under Section 4 of the Clayton Act “merely redresses the private injury”
rather than the “public interest,” which proposition, as discussed supra,
has been rejected by the Supreme Court in Kiefer-Stewart and Perma
Life. Burnham Chem. Co. v. Borax Consol., 170 F.2d 569, 578 & n.17
(9th Cir. 1948). Post-Kiefer-Stewart, Maltz was cited only three times
by this Circuit. In two of those instances, we cited Maltz for the
proposition that the right of a private party to recover damages under the
Clayton Act “was intended to provoke greater respect for the Act,” a
proposition in line with Kiefer-Stewart but not dispositive of this case.
Karseal Corp. v. Richfield Oil Corp., 221 F.2d 358, 365 (9th Cir. 1955);
see also Flintkote Co. v. Lysfjord, 246 F.2d 368, 398 n.40 (9th Cir. 1957).
The last instance in which we cited Maltz was in Memorex, where we
cited Maltz for “the simple proposition that some injury must have
occurred before the plaintiff can recover.” 555 F.2d at 1383. In fact, the
Seventh Circuit itself has not cited Maltz since 1954. The only post-
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 25
Maltz, a manufacturer of certain gambling devices, sued his
competitors for antitrust violations. 134 F.2d at 3. The
defendants successfully moved to dismiss the case on the
ground that the plaintiff’s “sole business [was] the
manufacture and sale of gambling devices, the use and sale
of which [were] against public policy and unlawful.” Id. In
affirming the dismissal, the Seventh Circuit found that
Maltz’s “business was the making and selling of goods
which could only be used by purchasers in furtherance of the
business of gambling.” Id. at 5. The court thus held that
Maltz had “no legal right in a business” “for which he may
obtain protection either in an action at law, or by a suit in
equity.” Id. “He had no legal rights to protect,” so
“defendants could not invade them.” 12 Id.
LegitScript also resorts to Pearl Music, 460 F. Supp.
1060, a case decided by the U.S. District Court for the
Central District of California in 1978, one year after
Memorex. The Pearl Music court distinguished Memorex
and Calnetics because the plaintiffs in Pearl Music, who sold
pirated tapes, “engaged in a business which [was], by its very
nature, entirely illegal.” Id. at 1067, 1068; see also id. at
1068 (“The almost total magnitude of this illegal conduct by
plaintiffs makes their miniscule conduct that may be legal,
insignificant, and, in any event, none of such miniscule and
Kiefer-Stewart instance in which the Seventh Circuit cited Maltz was for
the statement that private antitrust actions were authorized by the
Clayton Act to further the enforcement of the U.S. antitrust laws. Sun
Theatre Corp. v. RKO Radio Pictures, 213 F.2d 284, 289, 293 (7th Cir.
1954), abrogated by Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Rsch., Inc., 401
U.S. 321 (1971).
12
The Seventh Circuit also held that Maltz’s claim was barred because
he came to the court with unclean hands. Maltz, 134 F.2d at 5. This
holding probably did not survive Kiefer-Stewart, 340 U.S. at 214.
26 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
possibly legal conduct rises to the level of the legitimate
activities of Memorex and Calnetics.”). The court thus held
that, because the plaintiffs in Pearl Music “engaged in
wholly illegal enterprises which [were] directed against the
public in violation of clear federal and state statutory
criminal prohibitions,” they “should not be able to assert or
claim that they ha[d] rights protected by the anti-trust laws.”
Id. at 1068.
Relying on Maltz and Pearl Music, LegitScript argues
that a plaintiff that engages in an entirely or almost entirely
illegal business does not have antitrust standing under
Section 4 of the Clayton Act. But neither case is factually
apt. LegitScript fails to proffer any evidence suggesting that
PharmacyChecker was not legally registered, that
PharmacyChecker itself illegally imported any foreign
drugs, or that PharmacyChecker’s business exclusively or
almost exclusively involved facilitating the illegal
importation of foreign drugs. In fact, LegitScript does not
dispute that PharmacyChecker engaged in legitimate
businesses in many instances, acknowledging, for example,
that approximately 30% of the click-through fees collected
by PharmacyChecker were generated by customers outside
the United States. Hence, LegitScript’s reliance on Maltz
and Pearl Music is misplaced.
More fundamentally, Maltz and Pearl Music are at odds
with Calnetics. In Calnetics, 532 F.2d at 689, we endorsed
the reasoning of Semke v. Enid Automobile Dealers
Association, 456 F.2d 1361 (10th Cir. 1972). In Semke, the
Tenth Circuit allowed the plaintiff L.G. Semke, doing
business as Semke Auto Mart, an unlicensed dealer in new
cars, to maintain his antitrust suit, even though the
defendants argued that Semke’s “whole business operation”
violated state licensing statutes, which served an important
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 27
public interest in weeding out “unscrupulous automobile
dealers.” Calnetics, 532 F.2d at 689. More severe than
Maltz, Semke did not just facilitate illegal activities; he
himself engaged in a business that, like Pearl Music
plaintiffs’, was entirely illegal. Yet the Tenth Circuit
recognized Semke’s antitrust standing, and we relied on
Semke in deciding Calnetics to encourage private antitrust
enforcement. 13 Id.; see also Memorex, 555 F.2d at 1382
(citing Semke with approval). As such, Maltz and Pearl
Music are not persuasive.
B.
LegitScript also cites Modesto, a case decided by the
U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California,
309 F. Supp. 2d 1156, and later affirmed by us in an
unpublished memorandum disposition, 158 F. App’x 807.
In that case, the plaintiff Modesto Irrigation District
(“Modesto”) attempted to expand its electricity services into
Pittsburg, California—an area serviced by Pacific Gas and
Electric Company (“PG&E”)—without governmental
approval, believing such approval was unnecessary.
Modesto, 309 F. Supp. 2d at 1159–62. Modesto alleged that
PG&E engaged in anticompetitive conduct to forestall its
expansion into Pittsburg, and PG&E moved for summary
judgment on one of its affirmative defenses: that Modesto
lacked antitrust injury. Id. at 1161–62.
The district court found that governmental approval was
required for Modesto’s expansion into Pittsburg. Id. at
1163–69. Then, the district court reasoned that, because
Modesto “possessed neither the legal right nor the necessary
13
Notably, while Semke’s business, as he carried it out, was illegal, he
competed in a legitimate market.
28 PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC
[governmental approval] to expand its services into
Pittsburg,” PG&E’s alleged conduct trying to exclude
Modesto from servicing Pittsburg “could not inflict a[]
cognizable antitrust injury.” Id. at 1170. On appeal, the
Modesto panel affirmed, holding that because Modesto did
not receive the necessary governmental approval, it was “not
a lawful competitor of” PG&E in Pittsburg and thus “could
not have suffered an antitrust injury at the hands of PG&E”
there. Modesto Irrigation Dist. v. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co., 158
F. App’x 807, at *1 (9th Cir. 2005) (unpublished).
Modesto stands for the unremarkable proposition that a
private plaintiff does not suffer an antitrust injury if it would
suffer the same injury in the absence of the alleged
anticompetitive conduct. Simply put, antitrust standing is
lacking where “a force other than the antitrust violation fully
accounts for the plaintiff’s injury.” 2 Phillip E. Areeda &
Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law § 338, at 320 (2d ed.
2000). In Modesto, even absent PG&E’s alleged
anticompetitive conduct, Modesto would not have been able
to service Pittsburg because it lacked the necessary
governmental approval. Here, however, PharmacyChecker
is allegedly foreclosed from the relevant markets solely on
account of LegitScript’s alleged anticompetitive conduct.
LegitScript has identified no other forces that could fully
explain PharmacyChecker’s alleged injury, such as any
government enforcement actions or the threat thereof to
enjoin the operation of the PharmacyChecker.com website.
Modesto is thus distinguishable. 14
14
Likewise distinguishable are other cases cited by LegitScript that are
similar to Modesto. See Snake River Valley Elec. Ass’n v. PacifiCorp,
357 F.3d 1042, 1051 (9th Cir. 2004) (holding that the defendant’s
“refusal to give some of its current or former customers to [the plaintiff]
PHARMACYCHECKER.COM LLC V. LEGITSCRIPT LLC 29
V.
Following this Circuit’s binding precedents in Calnetics,
532 F.2d 674, and Memorex, 555 F.2d 1379, we “continue
to side with the goal of vigorous enforcement of our antitrust
laws,” id. at 1383, “the Magna Carta” for “the preservation
of [our] economic freedom and [] free-enterprise system,”
United States v. Topco Assocs., Inc., 405 U.S. 596, 610
(1972).
AFFIRMED.
was required by statute, [thus] shielding [the defendant]’s action from
antitrust liability”); Vinci v. Waste Mgmt., Inc., 80 F.3d 1372, 1375–77
(9th Cir. 1996) (holding that the plaintiff, neither a competitor nor a
consumer in the relevant market, did not have antitrust standing as a
dismissed employee to challenge the alleged anticompetitive conduct on
the ground that his refusal to participate in that conduct caused his
employment termination); Schuylkill Energy Res., Inc. v. Pa. Power &
Light Co., 113 F.3d 405, 418 (3d Cir. 1997) (holding that the plaintiff
lacked antitrust standing because both law and contract prevented the
plaintiff from competing with the defendant). The same is true for In re
Canadian Import Antitrust Litigation, 470 F.3d 785 (8th Cir. 2006), and
Realnetworks, Inc. v. DVD Copy Control Association, Inc., No. C 08-
4548 MHP, 2010 WL 145098 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 8, 2010), both of which
Judge Simon properly distinguished. In re Canadian Imp. Antitrust
Litig., 470 F.3d at 791 (“The absence of competition from Canadian
sources in the domestic prescription drug market, therefore, is caused by
the federal statutory and regulatory scheme adopted by the United States
government, not by the conduct of the defendants.”); Realnetworks, 2010
WL 145098, at *5, *6 (the court did “not hold that [the plaintiff] [was]
barred from maintaining an antitrust claim because it [had] engaged in
illegal activity”; rather, the court held that whatever injury the plaintiff
might have suffered stemmed not from the defendant’s alleged
anticompetitive conduct, but from injunctions issued by the court).
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PHARMACYCHECKER.COM No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PHARMACYCHECKER.COM No.
02Simon, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted February 3, 2025 Portland, Oregon Filed May 23, 2025 Before: Carlos T.
03LEGITSCRIPT LLC SUMMARY * Antitrust Standing The panel affirmed the district court’s order denying defendant LegitScript LLC’s motion for summary judgment based on lack of standing in an antitrust action brought by PharmacyChecker.com LLC.
04PharmacyChecker alleged that its competitor LegitScript engaged in a group boycott in violation of antitrust laws.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT PHARMACYCHECKER.COM No.
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