In
Associated Press v. United States the Supreme Court condemned the restrictive by-laws of the AP because, like FOGA, AP was operating as a private government: Here as in the ''Fashion Originator's Guild'' case, 'the combination is in reality an extra-governmental agency, which prescribes rules for the regulation and restraint of interstate commerce, and provides extra-judicial tribunals for determination and punishment of violations, and thus 'trenches upon the power of the national legislature and violates the statute.' In
FTC v. Cement Institute, the Supreme Court relied on the
FOGA case to support the proposition that restrictive practices that violate the Sherman Act violate § 5 of the FTC Act. In ''Klor's, Inc. v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc.
, the Supreme Court relied on the FOGA'' case to support the proposition: "Group boycotts, or concerted refusals by traders to deal with other traders, have long been held to be in the forbidden category. They have not been saved by allegations that they were reasonable in the specific circumstances, nor by a failure to show that they 'fixed or regulated prices, parcelled out or limited production, or brought about a deterioration in quality.' " In the ''Klor's'' case, the boycott was created when a retail store, Broadway-Hale, and ten household appliance manufacturers and their distributors agreed that the distributors would not sell household appliances (or would sell them only at discriminatory prices) to Broadway-Hale's small, nearby competitor, Klor's, a price-cutter. The defendants submitted undisputed evidence that their agreement hurt only one competitor (Klor's) and that so many other nearby appliance-selling competitors remained that competition in the marketplace continued to thrive. The Court held that this evidence was immaterial, because the conspiracy was "not to be tolerated merely because the victim is just one merchant." In
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Inc. v. Hydrolevel Corp., the Supreme Court condemned the use of as standards-setting agency by some of its members to exclude competition. As in the
FOGA case, the Court said: "ASME can be said to be 'in reality an extra-governmental agency, which prescribes rules for the regulation and restraint of interstate commerce.' " In
Nynex Corp. v. Discon, Inc., the Supreme Court held that the
per se rule against boycotts was limited to horizontal group boycotts. The Court said: [T]he specific legal question before us is whether an antitrust court considering an agreement by a buyer to purchase goods or services from one supplier rather than another should (after examining the buyer's reasons or justifications) apply the
per se rule if it finds no legitimate business reason for that purchasing decision. We conclude no boycott-related
per se rule applies and that the plaintiff here must allege and prove harm, not just to a single competitor, but to the competitive process,
i.e., to competition itself. The Court pointed to precedent:
FOGA involved "a group boycott in the strongest sense: A group of competitors threatened to withhold business from third parties unless those third parties would help them injure their directly competing rivals." ''Klor's'' "also involved a horizontal agreement among those threatened, namely, the appliance suppliers, to hurt a competitor of the retailer who made the threat." Because the case before the Court "concerns only a vertical agreement and a vertical restraint, a restraint that takes the form of depriving a supplier of a potential customer," it was not within existing boycott precedent. ==Commentary==