United States, 68180-68193 [07-5902]
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68180
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 232 / Tuesday, December 4, 2007 / Notices
Sherman County
Loup City Township Carnegie Library,
(Carnegie Libraries in Nebraska MPS), 652
N St., Loup City, 07001326.
Wayne County
Wayne United States Post Office, 120 Pearl
St., Wayne, 07001325.
PENNSYLVANIA
Allegheny County
Try Street Terminal, 600–620 2nd Ave.,
Pittsburgh, 07001327.
Philadelphia County
Budd, Edward G., Manufacturing Company,
2450 W. Hunting Park Rd., Philadelphia,
07001328.
WISCONSIN
Grant County
Boscobel Grand Army of the Republic Hall,
102 Mary St., Boscobel, 07001329.
Jackson County
Black River Falls Public Library, (Public
Library Facilities of Wisconsin MPS), 321
Main St., Black River Falls, 07001330.
Milwaukee County
Spencerian Business College, 2800 W. Wright
St., Milwaukee, 07001331.
A request for REMOVAL has been made for
the following resource:
COLORADO
Denver County
Beierle Farm, (Denver International Airport
MPS), Hudson Rd. just N. of Irondale Rd.
Watkins, 92001673.
A request to MOVE has been made for the
following resource:
OREGON
Multnomah County
U.S.S. LCI–713 (Landing craft), 1401 N.
Hayden Island Dr., Portland, 070003000.
[FR Doc. E7–23423 Filed 12–3–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–70–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
ANTITRUST DIVISION
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United States v. Vulcan Materials Co.,
et al. Proposed Final Judgment and
Competitive Impact Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h), that a proposed
Final Judgment and Competitive Impact
Statement have been filed with the
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia in United States v.
Vulcan Materials Co., et al., Civil Action
No. 1:07–cv–2044. On November 13,
2007, the United States filed a
Complaint to obtain equitable and other
relief against defendants Vulcan
Materials Company (‘‘Vulcan’’) and
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Florida Rock Industries, Inc. (‘‘Florida
Rock’’) to prevent Vulcan’s proposed
acquisition of Florida Rock. The
Complaint alleges that Vulcan’s
acquisition of Florida Rock would
substantially lessen competition in the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate in and around Atlanta,
Georgia; Columbus, Georgia;
Chattanooga, Tennessee; and South
Hampton Roads, Virginia, in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. 18. The proposed
Final Judgment, filed on November 13,
2007, requires defendants to divest
Florida Rock aggregate quarries in
Northwest, West, and Southwest
Atlanta, Georgia; Columbus, Georgia;
Chattanooga, Tennessee; and Richmond,
Virginia. In addition, defendants must
divest a Florida Rock distribution yard
located in Chesapeake, Virginia that
receives coarse aggregate by barge from
Florida Rock’s Richmond quarry; a
Vulcan aggregate quarry in South
Atlanta, Georgia; and a Vulcan quarry
under development in Southeast
Atlanta, Georgia.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed
Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact
Statement are available for inspection at
the Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, Antitrust Documents Group,
325 7th Street, NW., Room 215,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
514–2481), on the Department of
Justice’s Web site at https://
www.usdoj.gov/atr, and at the Office of
the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia,
Washington, DC. Copies of these
materials may be obtained from the
Antitrust Division upon request and
payment of a copying fee set by
Department of Justice regulations.
Public comment is invited within 60
days of the date of this notice. Such
comments, and responses thereto, will
be published in the Federal Register
and filed with the Court. Comments
should be directed to Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust
Division, U.S. Department of Justice,
1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
307–0924).
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations, Antitrust
Division.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, 1401 H Street,
NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20530,
Plaintiff, v. Vulcan Materials Company, 1200
Urban Center Drive, Birmingham, AL 35242,
and Florida Rock Industries, Inc., 155 East
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21st Street, Jacksonville, FL 32206,
Defendants.
Case: 1:07–cv–02044
Assigned To: Sullivan, Emmet G.
Assign. Date: 11/13/2007
Description: Antitrust
Deck Type: Antitrust
Date Stamp:
Complaint
Plaintiff United States of America
(‘‘United States’’), acting under the
direction of the Acting Attorney General
of the United States, brings this civil
antitrust action to obtain equitable and
other relief against defendants Vulcan
Materials Company (‘‘Vulcan’’) and
Florida Rock Industries, Inc. (‘‘Florida
Rock’’) to prevent Vulcan’s proposed
acquisition of Florida Rock. Plaintiff
complains and alleges as follows:
I. Nature of the Action
1. On February 19, 2007, Vulcan and
Florida Rock signed a definitive
agreement for Vulcan to acquire Florida
Rock in a cash-and-stock transaction
valued at approximately $4.6 billion.
The total blended cash-and-stock
consideration for this transaction is
approximately $68 per share.
2. Vulcan and Florida Rock both
produce and distribute in the United
States building materials, including,
among other things, construction
aggregates (which includes coarse
aggregate) and ready mix concrete.
Vulcan is the largest supplier of
construction aggregates in the United
States. Florida Rock is also a leading
supplier of construction aggregates in
the United States. Combined, Vulcan
and Florida Rock will have construction
aggregates reserves totaling
approximately 13.9 billion tons.
3. The United States brings this action
to prevent the proposed acquisition of
Florida Rock by Vulcan because it
would substantially lessen competition
in the production, distribution, and sale
of coarse aggregate in and around
Atlanta, Georgia; Columbus, Georgia;
Chattanooga, Tennessee; and South
Hampton Roads, Virginia, in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18.
II. Parties to the Proposed Transaction
4. Defendant Vulcan is a New Jersey
corporation with its principal place of
business in Birmingham, Alabama.
Vulcan produces, distributes, and sells,
among other products, construction
aggregates, ready mix concrete, hot mix
asphalt, and asphalt coating to
customers in 21 states, the District of
Columbia, and Mexico.
5. Vulcan is the largest producer of
construction aggregates in the United
States. It has over 300 facilities for the
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production and distribution of
construction aggregates and other
products. In 2006, Vulcan shipped
approximately 255 million tons of
construction aggregates, the majority of
which was coarse aggregate. In 2006,
Vulcan reported total sales of
approximately $3 billion.
6. Defendant Florida Rock is a Florida
corporation with its principal place of
business in Jacksonville, Florida.
Florida Rock produces, distributes, and
sells in the Southeastern and midAtlantic states, among other products,
construction aggregates, ready mix
concrete, prestressed concrete, and
cement.
7. Florida Rock is one of the largest
United States suppliers of construction
aggregates. In 2006, Florida Rock
shipped approximately 45 million tons
of construction aggregates, the majority
of which was coarse aggregate. In 2006,
Florida Rock reported total sales of
approximately $1.4 billion.
from other products in its physical
composition, functional characteristics,
customary uses, consistent availability,
and pricing. To the extent that any
substitutes exist, customers already use
these to the full extent possible in light
of the limits on their availability and the
amounts that can be used in a given
product, and could not use more of
them in place of coarse aggregate in
response to an increase in the price of
coarse aggregate.
14. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate would not cause the
purchasers of coarse aggregate to
substitute another product or otherwise
reduce their usage of coarse aggregate in
sufficient quantities so as to make such
a price increase unprofitable.
15. Accordingly, the production,
distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate
is a line of commerce and a relevant
product market within the meaning of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
III. Jurisdiction and Venue
B. The Relevant Geographic Markets
16. Coarse aggregate is a bulky, heavy,
and relatively low-value product. The
cost of transporting coarse aggregate is
high compared to the value of the
product.
17. Transportation costs limit the
distance coarse aggregate can be
economically transported from a quarry
or mine to a job site or a ready mix
concrete or asphalt plant. The
geographic area within which a coarse
aggregate supplier can compete most
vigorously thus is limited by the cost of
hauling the coarse aggregate. As a result,
the competitiveness of a coarse
aggregate supplier in a given area is
limited by its distance from customer
plants or project sites relative to other
suppliers.
18. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Cedarton, Georgia, known as the Six
Mile quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Floyd, Polk,
Haralson, and Bartow Counties in
Georgia (hereafter referred to as
‘‘Northwest Atlanta’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within Northwest Atlanta
may, depending on the location of their
plant or job sites, also economically
procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s
Adairsville, Bartow, and Rockmart
quarries and from another competitor’s
quarry located in Cartersville, Georgia.
Other quarries cannot on a regular basis
compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in Northwest Atlanta
because they are too far away and the
hauling costs are too great.
19. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
8. Plaintiff United States brings this
action under Section 15 of the Clayton
Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to
prevent and restrain defendants from
violating Section 7 of the Clayton Act,
15 U.S.C. 18.
9. Defendants produce, distribute, and
sell coarse aggregate and other products
in the flow of interstate commerce.
Defendants’ activities in producing,
distributing, and seIling these products
substantially affect interstate commerce.
This Court has subject matter
jurisdiction over this action pursuant to
Section 12 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
22, and 28 U.S.C. 1331, 1337(a), and
1345.
10. Defendants have consented to
venue and personal jurisdiction in this
judicial district.
IV. Trade and Commerce
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A. The Relevant Product Market
11. Construction aggregates consist
primarily of crushed stone, gravel, and
sand produced from natural deposits of
various materials and removed from
quarries, mines, or pits.
12. Coarse aggregate is a type of
construction aggregate. Coarse aggregate
is crushed stone produced at quarries or
mines and used for, among other things,
road base and the production of ready
mix concrete and asphalt. Coarse
aggregate typically is mixed with other
materials to produce ready mix concrete
and asphalt. Different sizes of coarse
aggregate are needed to meet different
project specifications.
13. There are no reliable substitutes
for coarse aggregate because it differs
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coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in Northwest Atlanta
would not cause those customers to
procure coarse aggregate from quarries
farther away than those identified in
paragraph 18 in sufficient quantities so
as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
20. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Yorkville, Georgia, known as the
Paulding quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Paulding,
Douglas, Carroll, Haralson, Polk, and
Cobb Counties in Georgia (hereafter
referred to as ‘‘West Atlanta’’).
Customers with plants or jobs within
West Atlanta may, depending on the
location of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan’s Villa Rica, Kennesaw,
and Lithia Springs quarries and from the
quarries of other competitors located in
Dallas, Georgia, and Douglasville,
Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a
regular basis compete successfully for
customers with plants or jobs in West
Atlanta because they are too far away
and the hauling costs are too great.
21. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in West Atlanta would not
cause those customers to procure coarse
aggregate from quarries farther away
than those identified in paragraph 20 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such
a price increase unprofitable.
22. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Tyrone, Georgia, known as the Tyrone
quarry. This quarry serves a geographic
area that includes, among other areas,
all or part of Fulton, Coweta, Fayette,
and Clayton Counties in Georgia
(hereafter referred to as ‘‘Southwest
Atlanta’’). Customers with plants or jobs
within Southwest Atlanta may,
depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s Madras
quarry and from another competitor’s
quarry located in Tyrone, Georgia. Other
quarries cannot on a regular basis
compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in Southwest Atlanta
because they are too far away and the
hauling costs are too great.
23. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in Southwest Atlanta
would not cause those customers to
procure coarse aggregate from quarries
farther away than those identified in
paragraph 22 in sufficient quantities so
as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
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24. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Riverdale, Georgia, known as the Forest
Park quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Fulton,
Clayton, Henry, DeKalb, and Fayette
Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred
to as ‘‘South Atlanta’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within South Atlanta may,
depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s Red Oak
quarry and from another competitor’s
quarry located in College Park, Georgia.
Other quarries cannot on a regular basis
compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in South Atlanta because
they are too far away and the hauling
costs are too great.
25. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in South Atlanta would
not cause those customers to procure
coarse aggregate from quarries farther
away than those identified in paragraph
24 in sufficient quantities so as to make
such a price increase unprofitable.
26. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Zotella, Georgia, known as the Griffin
quarry. This quarry serves a geographic
area that includes, among other areas,
all or part of Spalding and Henry
Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred
to as ‘‘Southeast Atlanta’’). Customers
with plants or jobs within Southeast
Atlanta may, depending on the location
of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan’s Stockbridge quarry. In
addition, Vulcan is in the process of
opening a new quarry in Butts County,
Georgia, expected to be operational in
2008, from which it plans to serve,
among other areas, customers in all or
part of Southeast Atlanta. Other quarries
cannot on a regular basis compete
successfully for customers with plants
or jobs in Southeast Atlanta because
they are too far away and the hauling
costs are too great.
27. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in Southeast Atlanta
would not cause those customers to
procure coarse aggregate from quarries
farther away than those identified in
paragraph 26 in sufficient quantities so
as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
28. Florida Rock owns a majority
interest in a company that owns and
operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Columbus, Georgia, known as
the Columbus quarry. This quarry serves
a geographic area that includes, among
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other areas, all or part of Muscogee and
Harris Counties in Georgia (hereafter
referred to as ‘‘Columbus’’). Customers
with plants or jobs within Columbus
may, depending on the location of their
plant or job sites, also economically
procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s
Barin quarry and from another
competitor’s quarry located in Midland,
Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a
regular basis compete successfully for
customers with plants or jobs in
Columbus because they are too far away
and the hauling costs are too great.
29. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in Columbus would not
cause those customers to procure coarse
aggregate from quarries farther away
than those identified in paragraph 28 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such
a price increase unprofitable.
30. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Chattanooga, Tennessee, known as the
Jersey Pike quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Hamilton
County in Tennessee (hereafter referred
to as ‘‘Chattanooga’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within Chattanooga may,
depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s
Chattanooga quarry and from another
competitor’s quarries located in
Chattanooga and Ringgold, Georgia.
Other quarries cannot on a regular basis
compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in Chattanooga because
they are too far away and the hauling
costs are too great.
31. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in Chattanooga would not
cause those customers to procure coarse
aggregate from quarries farther away
than those identified in paragraph 30 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such
a price increase unprofitable.
32. Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Richmond, Virginia, known as the
Richmond quarry, a coarse aggregate
quarry located in Havre de Grace,
Maryland, known as the Havre de Grace
quarry, and a barge-served distribution
yard located in Chesapeake, Virginia,
known as the Gilmerton yard. Florida
Rock also operates a distribution yard
owned by a third party located in
Chesapeake, Virginia. Via these
distribution yards, Florida Rock serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of the cities of
Norfolk, Suffolk, Portsmouth,
Chesapeake, and Virginia Beach in
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Virginia (hereafter referred to as ‘‘South
Hampton Roads’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within South Hampton
Roads may, depending on the location
of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan rail and barge terminals
supplied by Vulcan’s Richmond,
Lawrenceville, and Skippers quarries.
Other quarries cannot on a regular basis
compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in South Hampton Roads
because they do not have appropriate
distribution facilities in the area and/or
quarries similarly proximate to rail lines
or navigable water sources.
33. A small but significant postacquisition increase in the price of
coarse aggregate to customers with
plants or jobs in South Hampton Roads
would not cause those customers to
procure coarse aggregate from quarries
farther away than those identified in
paragraph 32 in sufficient quantities so
as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
34. Accordingly, the relevant
geographic markets, within the meaning
of Section of the Clayton Act, are
locations of coarse aggregate customers
in: Northwest Atlanta, West Atlanta,
Southwest Atlanta, South Atlanta,
Southeast Atlanta, Columbus,
Chattanooga, and South Hampton
Roads.
C. Anticompetitive Effects
1. The Proposed Transaction Will Harm
Competition in the Markets for Coarse
Aggregate in the Relevant Geographic
Markets
35. Price competition between Vulcan
and Florida Rock in the production,
distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate
has benefited customers.
36. In Southeast Atlanta and South
Hampton Roads, the proposed
acquisition will eliminate the
competition between Vulcan and
Florida Rock and reduce the number of
suppliers of many specifications of
coarse aggregate from two to one. In
Southeast Atlanta, the acquisition will
also eliminate the competition between
Florida Rock and Vulcan that would
result from the opening of Vulcan’s new
quarry in Butts County.
37. In Northwest Atlanta, Southwest
Atlanta, South Atlanta, Columbus, and
Chattanooga, the proposed acquisition
will eliminate the competition between
Vulcan and Florida Rock and reduce the
number of coarse aggregate suppliers
from three to two generally, and for
some customers and projects from two
to one.
38. In West Atlanta, the proposed
acquisition will eliminate the
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competition between Vulcan and
Florida Rock and reduce the number of
coarse aggregate suppliers from four to
three generally, and for some customers
and projects from three to two.
39. The proposed acquisition will
substantially increase the likelihood
that Vulcan will unilaterally increase
the price of coarse aggregate to a
significant number of customers in
Northwest Atlanta, West Atlanta,
Southwest Atlanta, South Atlanta,
Southeast Atlanta, Columbus,
Chattanooga, and South Hampton
Roads.
40. The response of other coarse
aggregate suppliers in the relevant
geographic markets would not be
sufficient to constrain a unilateral
exercise of market power by Vulcan
after the acquisition because those
suppliers likely would not have
sufficient capacity and/or incentives to
increase production and sales enough to
defeat an anticompetitive price increase
by Vulcan. State permits and county
zoning restrictions in many cases limit
quarries’ hours of operation and/or
production levels, and many coarse
aggregate suppliers face practical
limitations on the amount of truck
traffic their facilities can handle.
Moreover, because coarse aggregate
mined from quarries is a depletable
natural resource and every quarry has
finite reserves, every sale by a supplier
today represents a tradeoff against
future sales.
41. In addition, and notwithstanding
competitor responses, post-merger
Vulcan will be able to increase prices to
those customers that have plants or job
sites for which both a Vulcan quarry
and a Florida Rock quarry are closer
than any other quarries producing
coarse aggregate meeting their
specifications. Coarse aggregate
suppliers know the locations of their
competitors’ quarries and the distance
from their own quarries and their
competitors’ quarries to a customer’s
plant or job site. Generally, because of
transportation costs, the farther a
supplier’s closest competitor is from a
job site, the less price competition that
supplier faces for that project. Postacquisition, in instances where Vulcan
and Florida Rock quarries would be the
closest quarries to a customer’s plant or
project and the next closest coarse
aggregate supplier’s plant is farther from
the customer’s plant or project, the
combined firm, using the knowledge of
its competitors’ quarry locations, would
be able to charge such customers higher
prices.
42. Without the constraint of
competition between Vulcan and
Florida Rock, the combined firm will
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have a greater ability to exercise market
power by raising prices to customers for
whom Vulcan or Florida Rock were
sources of coarse aggregate.
43. In addition, Vulcan’s elimination
of Florida Rock as an independent
competitor in the production,
distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate
is likely to facilitate anticompetitive
coordination among the remaining
coarse aggregate suppliers in Northwest
Atlanta, West Atlanta, Southwest
Atlanta, South Atlanta, Columbus, and
Chattanooga. Coarse aggregate is
homogeneous and suppliers have access
to information about competitors’
output, capacity, and costs. Given these
market conditions, eliminating one of
the few coarse aggregate competitors is
likely to further increase the ability of
the remaining competitors to coordinate
successfully.
44. The transaction therefore will
substantially lessen competition in the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate in the relevant
geographic markets. This is likely to
lead to higher prices for the ultimate
consumers of coarse aggregate, in
violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act.
2. Entry Is Not Likely To Deter the
Exercise of Market Power
45. Timely and successful entry into
the production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate is unlikely in the
relevant geographic areas.
46. Securing the proper site for a
coarse aggregate quarry or mine is
difficult, time-consuming, and costly. It
requires the investigation and extensive
testing of candidate sites, as well as
negotiating necessary land transfers,
leases, and/or easements. The location
of a quarry, mine, or yard is important
due to the high cost of transporting
coarse aggregate, but there are few sites,
especially in metropolitan areas, on
which to locate coarse aggregate
operations.
47. Due to the geology in South
Hampton Roads, coarse aggregate for
most applications in South Hampton
Roads is produced outside the area. For
an entrant to compete effectively in
South Hampton Roads with a combined
Vulcan and Florida Rock, that entrant
must pair a new or existing rail- or
water-served quarry with a distribution
yard in the South Hampton Roads area
that is capable of receiving coarse
aggregate from such a quarry. Rail- or
water-served quarries situated to
compete effectively in South Hampton
Roads, and the proper sites for
distribution yards to serve those
quarries, are scarce.
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48. Obtaining necessary zoning
variances and governmental permits for
a coarse aggregate quarry or mine also
can be difficult, time-consuming, and
costly. In metropolitan areas, land of the
necessary size and geology often is
already utilized or does not have the
appropriate zoning, and obtaining
zoning variances can be extremely
difficult. Attempts to open a new coarse
aggregate quarry or mine, especially in
metropolitan areas (such as West
Atlanta, Southwest Atlanta, South
Atlanta, Columbus, Chattanooga, and
South Hampton Roads) but also
frequently in rural areas, often face
fierce public opposition. This public
opposition can prevent a coarse
aggregate quarry or mine from opening
or make opening it much more timeconsuming and costly. In addition, state
and federal water, air quality, and other
permitting process requirements must
be met.
49. Even after a quarry or mine site is
acquired and properly zoned and
permitted, the owner must spend
significant time and resources to
prepare the land and install the
equipment necessary to run the
operation.
50. Therefore, entry by any other firm
into the coarse aggregate market in the
relevant geographic areas will not be
timely, likely, or sufficient to defeat an
anticompetitive price increase.
V. Violations Alleged
51. The proposed acquisition of
Florida Rock by Vulcan would
substantially lessen competition and
tend to create a monopoly in interstate
trade and commerce in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18.
52. Unless restrained, the transaction
will have the following anticompetitive
effects, among others:
a. Actual and potential competition
between Vulcan and Florida Rock in the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate in the relevant
geographic markets will be eliminated;
b. Competition generally in the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate in the relevant
geographic markets will be substantially
lessened; and
c. Prices for coarse aggregate in the
relevant geographic markets likely will
increase.
VI. Request for Relief
53. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Vulcan’s proposed acquisition of
Florida Rock be adjudged and decreed
to be unlawful and in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
18;
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b. Defendants and all persons acting
on their behalf be permanently enjoined
and restrained from consummating the
proposed acquisition or from entering
into or carrying out any contract,
agreement, plan, or understanding, the
effect of which would be to combine
Vulcan with the operations of Florida
Rock;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for
this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and
further relief as the Court deems just
and proper.
Respectfully submitted,
For Plaintiff United States of America:
Thomas O. Barnett,
Assistant Attorney General D.C. Bar #426840
David L. Meyer,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General D.C. Bar
#414420
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section D.C. Bar #435204
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section D.C. Bar
#439469
Robert W. Wilder,
Helena Gardner,
Christine A. Hill (D.C. Bar #461048),
Leslie Peritz,
Lowell Stern (D.C. Bar #440487),
James S. Yoon (D.C. Bar #491309),
Attorneys, United States Department of
Justice Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000,
Washington, DC 20530, (202) 307–6336
Dated: November 13, 2007
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v.
Vulcan Materials Company and Florida Rock
Industries, Inc., Defendants.
Case No.:
Judge:
Deck Type: Antitrust
Date Stamp:
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
Final Judgment
Whereas, plaintiff, United States of
America, filed its Complaint on
November 13, 2007, and plaintiff and
defendants, Vulcan Materials Company
(‘‘Vulcan’’) and Florida Rock Industries,
Inc. (‘‘Florida Rock’’), by their
respective attorneys, have consented to
the entry of this Final Judgment without
trial or adjudication of any issue of fact
or law, and without this Final Judgment
constituting any evidence against or
admission by any party regarding any
issue of fact or law;
And whereas, defendants agree to be
bound by the provisions of this Final
Judgment pending its approval by the
Court;
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And whereas, the essence of this Final
Judgment is the prompt and certain
divestiture of certain rights or assets by
defendants to assure that competition is
not substantially lessened;
And whereas, the United States
requires defendants to make certain
divestitures for the purpose of
remedying the loss of competition
alleged in the Complaint;
And whereas, defendants have
represented to the United States that the
divestitures required below can and will
be made and that defendants will later
raise no claim of hardship or difficulty
as grounds for asking the Court to
modify any of the divestiture provisions
contained below;
Now therefore, before any testimony
is taken, without trial or adjudication of
any issue of fact or law, and upon
consent of the parties, it is ordered,
adjudged and decreed:
I. Jurisdiction
This Court has jurisdiction over the
subject matter of and each of the parties
to this action. The Complaint states a
claim upon which relief may be granted
against defendants under Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C.
18.
II. Definitions
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ‘‘Acquirer’’ or ‘‘Acquirers’’ means
the entity or entities to whom
defendants divest some or all of the
Divestiture Assets.
B. ‘‘Coarse aggregate’’ means crushed
stone produced at quarries or mines and
used for, among other things, road base
and the production of ready mix
concrete and asphalt.
C. ‘‘Divestiture Assets’’ means:
1. The following quarries and yard:
a. The Florida Rock Six Mile quarry,
located at 3785 Cave Springs Road,
Cedarton, Georgia;
b. The Florida Rock Paulding quarry,
located at 112 Quarry Road, Yorkville,
Georgia;
c. The Florida Rock Tyrone quarry,
located at 240 Rockwood Road, Tyrone,
Georgia;
d. The Vulcan Red Oak quarry,
located at 5414 Buffington Road, Red
Oak, Georgia;
e. The Vulcan quarry under
development in Butts County, located
on Greer Dairy Road, Jackson, Georgia;
f. The Florida Rock interest in
Columbus Quarry LLC, which owns the
Columbus quarry, located at 3001 Smith
Road, Columbus, Georgia;
g. The Florida Rock Jersey Pike
quarry, located at 2 Pelican Drive,
Chattanooga, Tennessee;
h. The Florida Rock Richmond
quarry, located at 2100 Deepwater
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Terminal Road, Richmond, Virginia (but
excluding the Florida Rock ready mix
concrete plant, the real property
necessary for the operation of the plant
(provided the conveyance of such
property does not interfere with the
operation of the Richmond quarry), and
all other tangible and intangible assets
exclusively used in the plant’s
operations) and, at the option of the
Acquirer, use of the real property,
parking lot, equipment shop, and office
building equivalent to that which
Florida Rock currently has for its quarry
operations; and
i. The Florida Rock Gilmerton yard,
located at 4606 Bainbridge Boulevard,
Chesapeake, Virginia (but excluding the
Florida Rock ready mix concrete plant,
the real property necessary for the
operation of the plant (provided the
conveyance of such property does not
interfere with the operation of the
Gilmerton yard), and all other tangible
and intangible assets exclusively used
in the plant’s operations) and, at the
option of the Acquirer, use of the real
property, parking lot, equipment shop,
fuel station, and office building
equivalent to that which Florida Rock
currently has for its operation of the
yard;
2. All tangible assets used in or for the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i), including but not
limited to all research and development
activities (except for any such research
and development activities that are
principally devoted to either
defendant’s operations as a whole and
not specifically to the operations of the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i), and that are not
necessary to the operation of the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i)), equipment,
tooling and fixed assets, real property
(leased or owned), personal property,
inventory, coarse aggregate reserves,
office furniture, materials, supplies, onor off-site warehouses or storage
facilities relating to the quarries and
yard; all licenses, permits, and
authorizations issued by any
governmental organization relating to
the quarries and yard; all contracts,
teaming arrangements, agreements,
leases (including renewal rights),
commitments, certifications, and
understandings relating to the quarries
and yard, including sales agreements
and supply agreements; all customer
lists, contracts, accounts, and credit
records relating to the quarries and yard;
all repair and performance records and
all other records relating to the quarries
and yard; at the option of the Acquirer
or Acquirers, a number of trucks, rail
cars, and other vehicles usable at the
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quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i) equal to, for each
separate type of truck, rail car, or other
vehicle, the average number of trucks,
rail cars, and other vehicles of that type,
owned or controlled by defendants,
used at each such quarry or yard per
month during the months of operation
of the quarry or yard between January 1,
2006 and December 31, 2006 (calculated
by averaging the number of trucks, rail
cars, and other vehicles of each type,
owned or controlled by defendants, that
were used at each quarry or yard at any
time during each month that the quarry
or yard was in operation); and at the
option of the Acquirer or Acquirers, a
number of barges usable at the quarry
and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(h)
and (i) equal to, for each separate type
of barge, the average number of barges
of that type, owned or controlled by
defendants, used at such quarry or yard
per month during the months of
operation of the quarry or yard between
January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2006
(calculated by averaging the number of
barges of that type, owned or controlled
by defendants, that were used at such
quarry or yard at any time during each
month that the quarry or yard was in
operation); and
3. All intangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing,
distribution, and sale of products
produced by or in the quarries or stored
in the yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i), including but not
limited to all contractual rights (except
for any such contractual rights that are
principally devoted to either
defendant’s operations as a whole and
not specifically to the operations of the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i), and that are not
necessary to the operation of the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs
II(C)(1)(a) through (i)), patents, licenses
and sub-licenses, intellectual property
rights, copyrights, trademarks, trade
names, service marks, service names,
technical information, know-how, trade
secrets, drawings, blueprints, designs,
design protocols, specifications for
materials, specifications for parts and
devices, safety procedures for the
handling of materials and substances,
quality assurance and control
procedures, all manuals and technical
information defendants provide to their
own employees, customers, suppliers,
agents, or licensees, and all research
data (including coarse aggregate reserve
testing information) concerning historic
and current research and development
efforts relating to the quarries and yard,
including but not limited to designs of
experiments and the results of
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successful and unsuccessful designs and
experiments. Notwithstanding anything
to the contrary in this Final Judgment,
if requested by an Acquirer, and subject
to approval by the United States in its
sole discretion, defendants shall offer to
enter into a transition services
agreement with respect to computer
software (including dispatch software
and management information systems)
and related documentation, and design
tools and simulation capability.
D. ‘‘Florida Rock’’ means defendant
Florida Rock Industries, Inc., a Florida
corporation with its headquarters in
Jacksonville, Florida, its successors and
assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
E. ‘‘Vulcan’’ means defendant Vulcan
Materials Company, a New Jersey
corporation with its headquarters in
Birmingham, Alabama, its successors
and assigns, and its subsidiaries,
divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships and joint ventures, and
their directors, officers, managers,
agents, and employees.
III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to
Vulcan and Florida Rock, as defined
above, and all other persons in active
concert or participation with Vulcan or
Florida Rock who receive actual notice
of this Final Judgment by personal
service or otherwise.
B. If, prior to complying with Sections
IV and V of this Final Judgment,
defendants sell or otherwise dispose of
all or substantially all of their assets or
of lesser business units that include the
Divestiture Assets, they shall require the
purchaser to be bound by the provisions
of this Final Judgment. Defendants need
not obtain such an agreement from the
acquirers of the assets divested pursuant
to this Final Judgment.
IV. Divestitures
A. Defendants are ordered and
directed, within ninety (90) calendar
days after the filing of the Complaint in
this matter, or five (5) days after notice
of the entry of this Final Judgment by
the Court, whichever is later, to divest
the Divestiture Assets in a manner
consistent with this Final Judgment to
an Acquirer or Acquirers acceptable to
the United States in its sole discretion.
The United States, in its sole discretion,
may agree to one or more extensions of
this time period, not to exceed in total
sixty (60) calendar days, and shall notify
the Court in each such circumstance.
Defendants agree to use their best efforts
to divest the Divestiture Assets as
expeditiously as possible.
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B. In accomplishing the divestitures
ordered by this Final Judgment,
defendants promptly shall make known,
by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divestiture Assets.
Defendants shall inform any person
making inquiry regarding a possible
purchase of the Divestiture Assets that
they are being divested pursuant to this
Final Judgment and provide that person
with a copy of this Final Judgment.
Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, defendants shall
offer to furnish to all prospective
Acquirers, subject to customary
confidentiality assurances, all
information and documents relating to
the Divestiture Assets customarily
provided in a due diligence process
except such information or documents
subject to the attorney-client or workproduct privileges. Defendants shall
make available such information to the
United States at the same time that such
information is made available to any
other person.
C. Defendants shall not take any
action that win impede in any way any
person from competing for or obtaining
the lease to the Branscome Chesapeake
yard, located at 120 Dominion
Boulevard, Chesapeake, Virginia.
D. Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, defendants shall
provide the Acquirer or Acquirers and
the United States information relating to
personnel involved in production,
operations, development, and sales at
the Divestiture Assets to enable the
Acquirer or Acquirers to make offers of
employment. Defendants shall not
interfere with any negotiations by the
Acquirer or Acquirers to employ any
employee of the Divestiture Assets
whose primary responsibility is
production, operations, development, or
sales at the Divestiture Assets.
E. Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, defendants shall
permit prospective Acquirers of the
Divestiture Assets to have reasonable
access to personnel and to make
inspections of the physical facilities of
the Divestiture Assets; access to any and
all environmental, zoning, and other
permit documents and information; and
access to any and all financial,
operational, or other documents and
information customarily provided as
part of a due diligence process.
F. With the exception of the Butts
County site listed in Paragraph
II(C)(1)(e), defendants shall warrant to
the Acquirer or Acquirers that each
asset will be operational on the date of
sale. Vulcan shall further warrant to the
Acquirer that it has obtained all
environmental, zoning, or other permits
required to produce coarse aggregate at
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the Vulcan quarry under development
in Butts County, identified in Paragraph
II(C)(1)(e), and that such permits are
transferable to the Acquirer.
G. Defendants shall not take any
action that will impede in any way the
permitting, operation, or divestiture of
the Divestiture Assets.
H. Defendants shall warrant to the
Acquirer or Acquirers that there are no
material defects in the environmental,
zoning, or other permits pertaining to
the operation of the Divestiture Assets.
Defendants shall not undertake, directly
or indirectly, any challenges to the
environmental, zoning, or other permits
relating to the operation of the
Divestiture Assets.
I. Unless the United States otherwise
consents in writing, any divestiture
pursuant to Section IV, or by trustee
appointed pursuant to Section V, of this
Final Judgment, shall include the entire
Divestiture Assets, and shall be
accomplished in such a way as to satisfy
the United States, in its sole discretion,
that the Divestiture Assets can and will
be used by the Acquirer or Acquirers as
viable, ongoing businesses engaged in
producing and distributing coarse
aggregate, that the Divestiture Assets
will remain viable, and that the
divestiture of such assets will remedy
the competitive harm alleged in the
Complaint. The sale of the Divestiture
Assets may be made to one or more
Acquirers, so long as the Florida Rock
Richmond quarry, identified in
Paragraph II(C)(1)(h) above, and the
Florida Rock Gilmerton yard, identified
in Paragraph II(C)(1)(i) above, are
divested to a single Acquirer. The
divestitures, whether pursuant to
Section IV or Section V of this Final
Judgment:
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1. Shall be made to an Acquirer or
Acquirers that, in the United States’s sole
judgment, has the intent and capability
(including the necessary managerial,
operational, technical and financial
capability) to compete effectively in the
production, distribution, and sale of coarse
aggregate; and
2. Shall be accomplished so as to satisfy
the United States, in its sole discretion, that
none of the terms of any agreement between
an Acquirer or Acquirers and defendants
gives defendants the ability to unreasonably
raise the Acquirer’s costs, to lower the
Acquirer’s efficiency, or otherwise to
interfere in the ability of the Acquirer to
compete effectively in the production,
distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate.
V. Appointment of Trustee To Effect
Divestitures
A. If defendants have not divested the
Divestiture Assets within the time
period specified in Paragraph IV(A),
defendants shall notify the United
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States of that fact in writing. Upon
application of the United States, the
Court shall appoint a trustee selected by
the United States and approved by the
Court to effect the divestiture of the
Divestiture Assets.
B. After the appointment of a trustee
becomes effective, only the trustee shall
have the right to sell the Divestiture
Assets. The trustee shall have the power
and authority to accomplish the
divestiture to an Acquirer acceptable to
the United States at such price and on
such terms as are then obtainable upon
reasonable effort by the trustee, subject
to the provisions of Sections IV, V, and
VI of this Final Judgment, and shall
have such other powers as this Court
deems appropriate. Subject to Paragraph
V(D) of this Final Judgment, the trustee
may hire at the cost and expense of
defendants any investment bankers,
attorneys, or other agents, who shall be
solely accountable to the trustee,
reasonably necessary in the trustee’s
judgment to assist in the divestiture.
C. Defendants shall not object to a sale
by the trustee on any ground other than
the trustee’s malfeasance. Any such
objection by defendants must be
conveyed in writing to the United States
and the trustee within ten (10) calendar
days after the trustee has provided the
notice required under Section VI.
D. The trustee shall serve at the cost
and expense of defendants, on such
terms and conditions as the United
States approves, and shall account for
all monies derived from the sale of the
assets sold by the trustee and all costs
and expenses so incurred. After
approval by the Court of the trustee’s
accounting, including fees for its
services and those of any professionals
and agents retained by the trustee, all
remaining money shall be paid to
defendants and the trust shall then be
terminated. The compensation of the
trustee and any professionals and agents
retained by the trustee shall be
reasonable in light of the value of the
Divestiture Assets and based on a fee
arrangement providing the trustee with
an incentive based on the price and
terms of the divestiture and the speed
with which it is accomplished, but
timeliness is paramount.
E. Defendants shall use their best
efforts to assist the trustee in
accomplishing the required divestiture.
The trustee and any consultants,
accountants, attorneys, and other
persons retained by the trustee shall
have full and complete access to the
personnel, books, records, and facilities
of the business to be divested, and
defendants shall develop financial and
other information relevant to such
business as the trustee may reasonably
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request, subject to reasonable protection
for trade secrets or other confidential
research, development, or commercial
information. Defendants shall take no
action to interfere with or to impede the
trustee’s accomplishment of the
divestiture.
F. After its appointment, the trustee
shall file monthly reports with the
United States and the Court setting forth
the trustee’s efforts to accomplish the
divestiture ordered under this Final
Judgment. To the extent such reports
contain information that the trustee
deems confidential, such reports shall
not be filed in the public docket of the
Court. Such reports shall include the
name, address, and telephone number of
each person who, during the preceding
month, made an offer to acquire,
expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or
was contacted or made an inquiry about
acquiring any interest in the Divestiture
Assets, and shall describe in detail each
contact with any such person. The
trustee shall maintain full records of all
efforts made to divest the Divestiture
Assets.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished
the divestitures ordered under this Final
Judgment within six months after its
appointment, the trustee shall promptly
file with the Court a report setting forth:
(1) The trustee’s efforts to accomplish
the required divestiture; (2) the reasons,
in the trustee’s judgment, why the
required divestiture has not been
accomplished; and (3) the trustee’s
recommendations. To the extent such
report contains information that the
trustee deems confidential, such report
shall not be filed in the public docket
of the Court. The trustee shall at the
same time furnish such report to the
United States, which shall have the
right to make additional
recommendations consistent with the
purpose of the trust. The Court
thereafter shall enter such orders as it
shall deem appropriate to carry out the
purpose of the Final Judgment, which
may, if necessary, include extending the
trust and the term of the trustee’s
appointment by a period requested by
the United States.
VI. Notice of Proposed Divestitures
A. Within two (2) business days
following execution of a definitive
divestiture agreement, defendants or the
trustee, whichever is then responsible
for effecting the divestiture required
herein, shall notify the United States of
any proposed divestiture required by
Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
If the trustee is responsible, it shall
similarly notify defendants. The notice
shall set forth the details of the
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proposed divestiture and list the name,
address, and telephone number of each
person not previously identified who
offered or expressed an interest in or
desire to acquire any ownership interest
in the Divestiture Assets, together with
full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of
receipt by the United States of such
notice, the United States may request
from defendant, the proposed Acquirer
or Acquirers, any other third party, or
the trustee, if applicable, additional
information concerning the proposed
divestiture, the proposed Acquirer or
Acquirers, and any other potential
Acquirer. Defendants and the trustee
shall furnish any additional information
requested within fifteen (15) calendar
days of the receipt of the request, unless
the parties shall otherwise agree.
C. Within thirty (30) calendar days
after receipt of the notice, or within
twenty (20) calendar days after the
United States has been provided the
additional information requested from
defendant, the proposed Acquirer or
Acquirers, any third party, or the
trustee, whichever is later, the United
States shall provide written notice to
defendants and the trustee, if there is
one, stating whether or not it objects to
the proposed divestiture. If the United
States provides written notice that it
does not object, the divestiture may be
consummated, subject only to
defendant’s limited right to object to the
sale under Paragraph V(C) of this Final
Judgment. Absent written notice that the
United States does not object to the
proposed Acquirer or upon objection by
the United States, a divestiture
proposed under Section IV or Section V
shall not be consummated. Upon
objection by defendants under
Paragraph V(C), a divestiture proposed
under Section V shall not be
consummated unless approved by the
Court.
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VII. Financing
Defendants shall not finance all or
any part of any purchase made pursuant
to Section IV or V of this Final
Judgment.
VIII. Hold Separate
Until the divestitures required by this
Final Judgment have been
accomplished, defendants shall take all
steps necessary to comply with the Hold
Separate Stipulation and Order entered
by this Court. Defendants shall take no
action that would jeopardize the
divestiture ordered by this Court.
IX. Affidavits
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days
of the filing of the Complaint in this
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Jkt 214001
matter, and every thirty (30) calendar
days thereafter until the divestitures
have been completed under Section IV
or V, defendants shall deliver to the
United States an affidavit as to the fact
and manner of their compliance with
Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
Each such affidavit shall include the
name, address, and telephone number of
each person who, during the preceding
thirty (30) calendar days, made an offer
to acquire, expressed an interest in
acquiring, entered into negotiations to
acquire, or was contacted or made an
inquiry about acquiring, any interest in
the Divestiture Assets, and shall
describe in detail each contact with any
such person during that period. Each
such affidavit shall also include a
description of the efforts defendants
have taken to solicit buyers for the
Divestiture Assets, and to provide
required information to any prospective
Acquirer, including the limitations, if
any, on such information. Assuming the
information set forth in the affidavit is
true and complete, any objection by the
United States to information provided
by defendants, including limitations on
the information, shall be made within
fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of
such affidavit.
B. Within twenty (20) calendar days
of the filing of the Complaint in this
matter, defendants shall deliver to the
United States an affidavit that describes
in reasonable detail all actions
defendants have taken and all steps
defendants have implemented on an
ongoing basis to comply with Section
VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendants
shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit describing any changes to the
efforts and actions outlined in
defendants’ earlier affidavits filed
pursuant to this section within fifteen
(15) calendar days after the change is
implemented.
C. Defendants shall keep all records of
all efforts made to preserve and divest
the Divestiture Assets until one year
after such divestitures have been
completed.
X. Compliance Inspection
A. For the purposes of determining or
securing compliance with this Final
Judgment, or of determining whether
the Final Judgment should be modified
or vacated, and subject to any legally
recognized privilege, from time to time
authorized representatives of the United
States Department of Justice, including
consultants and other persons retained
by the United States, shall, upon written
request of an authorized representative
of the Assistant Attorney General in
charge of the Antitrust Division, and on
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68187
reasonable notice to defendants, be
permitted:
1. Access during defendants’ office hours
to inspect and copy, or at the option of the
United States, to require defendants to
provide hard or electronic copies of, all
books, ledgers, accounts, records, data and
documents in the possession, custody, or
control of defendants, relating to any matters
contained in this Final Judgment; and
2. To interview, either informally or on the
record, defendants’ officers, employees, or
agents, who may have their individual
counsel present, regarding such matters. The
interviews shall be subject to the reasonable
convenience of the interviewee and without
restraint or interference by defendant.
B. Upon the written request of an
authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of
the Antitrust Division, defendants shall
submit written reports or responses to
written interrogatories, under oath if
requested, relating to any of the matters
contained in this Final Judgment as may
be requested.
C. No information or documents
obtained by the means provided in this
section shall be divulged by the United
States to any person other than an
authorized representative of the
executive branch of the United States,
except in the course of legal proceedings
to which the United States is a party
(including grand jury proceedings), or
for the purpose of securing compliance
with this Final Judgment, or as
otherwise required by law.
D. If, at the time information or
documents are furnished by defendants
to the United States, defendants
represent and identify in writing the
material in any such information or
documents to which a claim of
protection may be asserted under Rule
26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, and defendants mark each
pertinent page of such material,
‘‘Subject to claim of protection under
Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure,’’ then the United States
shall give defendants ten (10) calendar
days notice prior to divulging such
material in any legal proceeding (other
than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendants may not reacquire any
part of the Divestiture Assets during the
term of this Final Judgment.
XII. Retention of Jurisdiction
This Court retains jurisdiction to
enable any party to this Final Judgment
to apply to this Court at any time for
further orders and directions as may be
necessary or appropriate to carry out or
construe this Final Judgment, to modify
any of its provisions, to enforce
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competition likely would result in
higher prices for coarse aggregate in the
affected areas.
XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment
At the same time the Complaint was
Unless this Court grants an extension, filed, the United States also filed a Hold
this Final Judgment shall expire ten
Separate Stipulation and Order and a
years from the date of its entry.
proposed Final Judgment, which were
designed to eliminate the
XIV. Public Interest Determination
anticompetitive effects of the
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the
acquisition. Under the proposed Final
public interest. The parties have
Judgment, which is explained more
complied with the requirements of the
fully below, Vulcan and Florida Rock
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
are required to divest single coarse
15 U.S.C. 16, including making copies
aggregate quarries in Chattanooga,
available to the public of this Final
Tennessee, Columbus, Georgia, and
Judgment, the Competitive Impact
Richmond, Virginia; four quarries and
Statement, and any comments thereon
one site that is being developed for use
and the United States’s responses to
as a quarry in the western and southern
comments. Based upon the record
parts of the Atlanta area; and a
before the Court, which includes the
distribution yard in Chesapeake,
Competitive Impact Statement and any
Virginia. Until the divestitures required
comments and response to comments
by the Final Judgment have been
filed with the Court, entry of this Final
accomplished, the Hold Separate
Judgment is in the public interest.
Stipulation and Order requires Vulcan
Date: llllllllllllllll and Florida Rock to preserve, maintain,
and continue to operate the plants
Court approval subject to procedures
discussed above (hereafter ‘‘Divestiture
of the Antitrust Procedures and
Assets’’) as independent, ongoing,
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16.
llllllllllllllllll
l economically viable competitive
businesses held entirely separate,
United States District Judge
distinct, and apart from those of
United States District Court for the
defendants’ other operations.
District of Columbia
The United States, Vulcan, and
Florida Rock have stipulated that the
United States of America, Plaintiff, v.
Vulcan Materials Company and Florida Rock proposed Final Judgment may be
entered after compliance with the
Industries, Inc., Defendants.
APPA. Entry of the proposed Final
Case: 1:07-cv-02044
Judgment would terminate this action,
Assigned To: Sullivan, Emmet G.
Assign. Date: 11/13/2007
except that the Court would retain
Description: Antitrust
jurisdiction to construe, modify, or
Deck Type: Antitrust
enforce the provisions of the proposed
Date Stamp:
Final Judgment and to punish violations
thereof.
Competitive Impact Statement
Plaintiff United States of America
II. Description of the Events Giving Rise
(‘‘United States’’), pursuant to Section
to the Alleged Violation
2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and
A. The Defendants and the Proposed
Penalties Act (‘‘APPA’’ or ‘‘Tunney
Transaction
Act’’), 15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h), files this
Vulcan is a New Jersey corporation
Competitive Impact Statement relating
with its principal place of business in
to the proposed Final Judgment
submitted for entry in this civil antitrust Birmingham, Alabama. It is the nation’s
largest producer of construction
proceeding.
aggregates, and is also a major provider
I. Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding of other construction materials and
The United States filed a civil
related services. In 2006, Vulcan
antitrust Complaint on November 13,
shipped approximately 255 million tons
2007, seeking to enjoin the proposed
of construction aggregates—the majority
acquisition by Vulcan Materials
of which were coarse aggregate—to
Company (‘‘Vulcan’’) of Florida Rock
customers in 21 states, the District of
Industries, Inc. (‘‘Florida Rock’’). The
Columbia, and Mexico. Its 2006 sales
Complaint alleges that the likely effect
were over $3 billion.
Florida Rock is a Florida corporation
of this acquisition would be to lessen
with its principal place of business in
competition substantially in the
Jacksonville, Florida. It produces,
production, distribution, and sale of
distributes, and sells, among other
coarse aggregate in certain areas of
products, construction aggregates, ready
Georgia, Tennessee and Virginia, in
mix concrete, prestressed concrete, and
violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
cement. Its sales are concentrated in the
Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. This loss of
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compliance, and to punish violations of
its provisions.
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southeastern and mid-Atlantic states. In
2006, Florida Rock shipped
approximately 45 million tons of
construction aggregates, a majority of
which were coarse aggregate, and
reported total sales of approximately
$1.4 billion.
On February 19, 2007, Vulcan and
Florida Rock entered into an agreement
for Vulcan to acquire Florida Rock in a
cash-and-stock transaction valued at
approximately $4.6 billion.
B. The Competitive Effects of the
Transaction on the Market for Coarse
Aggregate.
1. Relevant Product Market
The Complaint alleges that the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate is a relevant product
market within the meaning of Section 7
of the Clayton Act. Coarse aggregate is
a type of construction aggregate, and
includes crushed stone of varying sizes
produced at quarries or mines.1 Among
other things, it is used as base material
for roads and other construction sites
and for the production of ready mix
concrete and asphalt. Different sizes of
coarse aggregate are needed to meet
different project specifications.
There are no reliable substitutes for
coarse aggregate because it differs from
other products in its physical
composition, functional characteristics,
customary uses, consistent availability,
and pricing. To the extent that any
substitutes exist, most customers
already use these to the full extent
possible in light of the limits on their
availability and the amounts that can be
used in a given product, and cannot use
more of them in place of coarse
aggregate in response to an increase in
the price of coarse aggregate. The
Complaint alleges that a small but
significant post-acquisition increase in
the price of coarse aggregate would not
cause its purchasers to substitute
another product in sufficient quantities
so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable. Accordingly, the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate is a relevant product
market.
2. Relevant Geographic Markets
Coarse aggregate is a bulky, heavy,
and relatively low-value product. In
some markets, coarse aggregate is
delivered to customers exclusively by
truck. In other markets, the lack of
native coarse aggregate sources and the
availability of rail and/or navigable
waterways makes it economical to rail
1 Construction aggregates include crushed stone,
grave, sand, recycled asphalt, and recycled
concrete.
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barge, and/or ship coarse aggregate
directly to customer plants or job sites,
or, much more frequently, to a
distribution yard from which it is
picked up by truck and delivered to the
end customer. The cost of transporting
coarse aggregate is high compared to its
value, which limits the distance it can
be economically transported from a
quarry or distribution yard to a ready
mix concrete or asphalt plant or job site.
Transportation costs, as well as the
location of competitors relative to a
customer’s plant or job site, thus limit
the geographic area within which a
coarse aggregate supplier can effectively
compete.
The Complaint alleges that there are
a number of geographic areas that
constitute geographic markets in which
the proposed acquisition by Vulcan of
Florida Rock will harm competition in
the production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate. As discussed below, in
each of these geographic markets,
Vulcan and Florida Rock quarries face
limited competition from other
suppliers in the delivery of coarse
aggregate to customers in the market
and, because of transportation costs, a
small but significant post-acquisition
increase in the price of coarse aggregate
would not cause customers to procure
coarse aggregate from quarries farther
away.
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a. Northwest Atlanta
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Cedarton, Georgia, known as the Six
Mile quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Floyd, Polk,
Haralson, and Bartow Counties in
Georgia (hereafter referred to as
‘‘Northwest Atlanta’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within Northwest Atlanta
may, depending on the location of their
plant or job sites, also economically
procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s
Adairsville, Bartow, and Rockmart
quarries and from another competitor’s
quarry located in Cartersville, Georgia.
b. West Atlanta
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Yorkville, Georgia, known as the
Paulding quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Paulding,
Douglas, Carroll, Haralson, Polk, and
Cobb Counties in Georgia (hereafter
referred to as ‘‘West Atlanta’’).
Customers with plants or jobs within
West Atlanta may, depending on the
location of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan’s Villa Rica, Kennesaw,
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and Lithia Springs quarries and from the
quarries of other competitors located in
Dallas, Georgia, and Douglasville,
Georgia.
c. Southwest Atlanta
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Tyrone, Georgia, known as the Tyrone
quarry. This quarry serves a geographic
area that includes, among other areas,
all or part of Fulton, Coweta, Fayette,
and Clayton Counties in Georgia
(hereafter referred to as ‘‘Southwest
Atlanta’’). Customers with plants or jobs
within Southwest Atlanta may,
depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s Madras
quarry and from another competitor’s
quarry located in Tyrone, Georgia.
d. South Atlanta
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Riverdale, Georgia, known as the Forest
Park quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Fulton,
Clayton, Henry, DeKalb, and Fayette
Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred
to as ‘‘South Atlanta’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within South Atlanta may,
depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s Red Oak
quarry and from another competitor’s
quarry located in College Park, Georgia.
e. Southeast Atlanta
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Zotella, Georgia, known as the Griffin
quarry. This quarry serves a geographic
area that includes, among other areas,
all or part of Spalding and Henry
Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred
to as ‘‘Southeast Atlanta’’). Customers
with plants or jobs within Southeast
Atlanta may, depending on the location
of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan’s Stockbridge quarry. In
addition, Vulcan is in the process of
opening a new quarry in Butts County,
Georgia, expected to be operational in
2008, from which it plans to serve,
among other areas, customers in all or
part of Southeast Atlanta.
f. Columbus
Florida Rock owns a majority interest
in a company that owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Columbus, Georgia, known as the
Columbus quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Muscogee and
Harris Counties in Georgia (hereafter
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referred to as ‘‘Columbus’’). Customers
with plants or jobs within Columbus
may, depending on the location of their
plant or job sites, also economically
procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s
Barin quarry and from another
competitor’s quarry located in Midland,
Georgia.
g. Chattanooga
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Chattanooga, Tennessee, known as the
Jersey Pike quarry. This quarry serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of Hamilton
County in Tennessee (hereafter referred
to as ‘‘Chattanooga’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within Chattanooga may,
depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan’s
Chattanooga quarry and from another
competitor’s quarries located in
Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Ringgold,
Georgia.
h. South Hampton Roads
Florida Rock owns and operates a
coarse aggregate quarry located in
Richmond, Virginia, known as the
Richmond quarry, a coarse aggregate
quarry located in Havre de Grace,
Maryland, known as the Havre de Grace
quarry, and a barge-served distribution
yard located in Chesapeake, Virginia,
known as the Gilmerton yard. Florida
Rock also operates a distribution yard
owned by a third party located in
Chesapeake, Virginia. Via these
distribution yards, Florida Rock serves a
geographic area that includes, among
other areas, all or part of the cities of
Norfolk, Suffolk, Portsmouth,
Chesapeake, and Virginia Beach in
Virginia (hereafter referred to as ‘‘South
Hampton Roads’’). Customers with
plants or jobs within South Hampton
Roads may, depending on the location
of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan rail and barge terminals
supplied by Vulcan’s Richmond,
LawrenceviIle, and Skippers quarries.
Other quarries cannot on a regular basis
compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in South Hampton Roads
because they do not have appropriate
distribution facilities in the area and/or
quarries similarly proximate to rail lines
or navigable water sources.
3. Anticompetitive Effects of the
Acquisition
In each relevant geographic area, the
proposed acquisition will eliminate the
competition between Vulcan and
Florida Rock and substantially increase
market concentration. In Southeast
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Atlanta and South Hampton Roads, it
will reduce the number of suppliers of
most specifications of coarse aggregate
from two to one. In Northwest Atlanta,
Southwest Atlanta, South Atlanta,
Columbus, and Chattanooga, the
proposed acquisition will reduce the
number of coarse aggregate suppliers
from three to two generally, and for
some customers and projects, will
reduce the number from two to one. In
West Atlanta, the proposed acquisition
will reduce the number of coarse
aggregate suppliers from four to three
generally, and for some customers and
projects, will reduce the number from
three to two.
The proposed acquisition will
substantially increase the likelihood
that Vulcan will unilaterally increase
the price of coarse aggregate to a
significant number of customers in all of
the relevant geographic areas. The
response of other coarse aggregate
suppliers in the relevant geographic
markets would not be sufficient to
constrain a unilateral exercise of market
power by Vulcan after the acquisition
because those suppliers likely would
not have sufficient capacity and/or
incentives to increase production and
sales enough to defeat an
anticompetitive price increase by
Vulcan. State permits and county
zoning restrictions in many cases limit
quarries’ hours of operation and/or
production levels, and many coarse
aggregate suppliers face practical
limitations on the amount of truck
traffic their facilities can handle.
Moreover, because coarse aggregate
mined trom quarries is a depletable
natural resource and every quarry has
finite reserves, every sale by a supplier
today represents a tradeoff against
future sales.
Likewise, the response of customers
would be insufficient to constrain a
unilateral exercise of market power by
Vulcan. To the extent that cost-effective
substitutes exist, these already are being
used to the full extent possible, and
customers would not increase their use
of these substitutes in response to an
increase in the price of coarse aggregate.
Thus, customers would not be able to
prevent Vulcan’s exercise of market
power.
In addition, and notwithstanding
competitor responses, post-acquisition
Vulcan will be able to increase prices to
those customers that have plants or job
sites for which both a Vulcan quarry
and a Florida Rock quarry are closer
than any other quarries producing
coarse aggregate meeting their
specifications. Coarse aggregate
suppliers know the locations of their
competitors’ quarries and the distance
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from their own quarries and their
competitors’ quarries to a customer’s
plant or job site. Generally, because of
transportation costs, the farther a
supplier’s closest competitor is from a
job site, the less price competition that
supplier faces for that project. Postacquisition, in instances where Vulcan
and Florida Rock quarries would be the
closest quarries to a customer’s plant or
project and the next closest coarse
aggregate supplier’s plant is farther from
the customer’s plant or project, the
combined firm, using the knowledge of
its competitors’ quarry locations, would
be able to charge such customers higher
prices.
Further, the proposed acquisition is
likely to facilitate anticompetitive
coordination among the remaining
coarse aggregate suppliers in Northwest
Atlanta, West Atlanta, Southwest
Atlanta, South Atlanta, Columbus, and
Chattanooga. Coarse aggregate is
homogeneous and suppliers have access
to information about competitors’
output, capacity, and costs. Given these
market conditions, eliminating Florida
Rock as one of the few coarse aggregate
competitors is likely to further increase
the ability of the remaining competitors
to coordinate successfully.
Finally, timely and successful entry
into the production, distribution, and
sale of coarse aggregate is unlikely in
any of the geographic areas and thus
will not defeat anticompetitive
unilateral or coordinated price increases
resulting from the proposed acquisition.
Securing the proper site for a coarse
aggregate quarry or mine is difficult,
time-consuming, and costly; it requires
the investigation and extensive testing
of candidate sites to find ones with
adequate reserves of sufficient quality,
and can require negotiations with
multiple landowners as well as with
government officials. Additional
difficulties face a new entrant seeking to
provide coarse aggregate to South
Hampton Roads. In South Hampton
Roads, the area’s geology is such that
coarse aggregate for most applications
must be imported from outside the area.
For an entrant to compete effectively in
South Hampton Roads with Vulcan
post-acquisition, that entrant must pair
a new or existing rail-or water-served
quarry with a distribution yard in South
Hampton Roads that is capable of
receiving coarse aggregate from such a
quarry. Rail-or water-served quarries
situated to compete effectively in South
Hampton Roads, and the proper sites for
distribution yards to serve such
quarries, are scarce. In all of the relevant
geographic markets the location of a
quarry or yard is important due to the
high cost of transporting coarse
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aggregate, but there are very few sites,
especially in metropolitan areas, on
which to locate coarse aggregate
operations.
Obtaining necessary zoning variances
and government permits for a coarse
aggregate quarry can also be difficult,
time-consuming, and costly. In
metropolitan areas, land of the
necessary size and geology is often
already utilized or does not have the
appropriate zoning, and obtaining
zoning variances can be extremely
difficult. Attempts to open a new coarse
aggregate quarry or mine, especially in
metropolitan areas (such as West
Atlanta, Southwest Atlanta, South
Atlanta, Columbus, Chattanooga, and
South Hampton Roads) but also
frequently in rural areas, often face
fierce public opposition, which delays
and raises the expense of opening such
operations or prevents such projects
altogether. In addition, state and federal
water, air quality, and other permitting
process requirements must be met,
which can take from months to years.
Finally, even after a quarry or mine
site is selected, acquired, and properly
zoned and permitted, the owner must
spend significant time and resources to
prepare the land and install the
equipment necessary to run the
operation. As a result of all of these
costly and time-consuming barriers to
entry, entry by any other firm. into the
coarse aggregate market in the relevant
geographic areas will not be timely,
likely, or sufficient to defeat an anti
competitive price mcrease.
III. Explanation of the Proposed Final
Judgment
A. The Divestiture Assets
The divestitures provided for in the
proposed Final Judgment will eliminate
the anticompetitive effects of the
acquisition in the markets for the
production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate in all of the relevant
geographic markets. In each market, the
divestitures will establish a new,
independent, and economically viable
competitor.
The Divestiture Assets include the
following quarries and yard:
a. The Florida Rock Six Mile quarry,
located at 3785 Cave Springs Road,
Cedarton, Georgia, divestiture of which
will remedy the competitive concerns in
Northwest Atlanta;
b. The Florida Rock Paulding quarry,
located at 112 Quarry Road, Yorkville,
Georgia, divestiture of which will
remedy the competitive concerns in
West Atlanta;
c. The Florida Rock Tyrone quarry,
located at 240 Rockwood Road, Tyrone,
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Georgia, divestiture of which will
remedy the competitive concerns in
Southwest Atlanta;
d. The Vulcan Red Oak quarry,
located at 5414 Buffington Road, Red
Oak, Georgia, divestiture of which will
remedy the competitive concerns in
South Atlanta;
e. The Vulcan quarry under
development in Butts County, located
on Greer Dairy Road, Jackson, Georgia,
divestiture of which will remedy the
competitive concerns in Southeast
Atlanta;
f. The Florida Rock interest in
Columbus Quarry LLC, which owns the
Columbus quarry, located at 3001 Smith
Road, Columbus, Georgia, divestiture of
which will remedy the competitive
concerns in Columbus;
g. The Florida Rock Jersey Pike
quarry, located at 2 Pelican Drive,
Chattanooga, Tennessee, divestiture of
which will remedy the competitive
concerns in Chattanooga;
h. The Florida Rock Richmond quarry
located at 2100 Deepwater Terminal
Road, Richmond, Virginia (but
excluding the Florida Rock ready mix
concrete plant, the real property
necessary for the operation of the plant
(provided the conveyance of such
property does not interfere with the
operation of the Richmond quarry), and
all other tangible and intangible assets
exclusively used in the plant’s
operations) and, at the option of the
Acquirer, use of the real property,
parking lot, equipment shop, and office
building equivalent to that which
Florida Rock currently has for its quarry
operations, divestiture of which (in
addition to the yard listed in Paragraph
(i)) will remedy the competitive
concerns in South Hampton Roads; and
i. in South Hampton Roads, the
Florida Rock Gilmerton yard, located at
4606 Bainbridge Boulevard,
Chesapeake, Virginia (but excluding the
Florida Rock ready mix concrete plant,
the real property necessary for the
operation of the plant (provided the
conveyance of such property does not
interfere with the operation of the
Gilmerton yard), and all other tangible
and intangible assets exclusively used
in the plant’s operations) and, at the
option of the Acquirer, use of the real
property, parking lot, equipment shop,
fuel station, and office building
equivalent to that which Florida Rock
currently has for its operation of the
yard, divestiture of which (in addition
to the quarry listed in Paragraph (h))
will remedy the competitive concerns in
South Hampton Roads.
The proposed merger does not raise
competitive concerns with respect to the
sale of ready mix concrete in either
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Richmond or South Hampton Roads.
Thus, parts (h) and (i) of the Divestiture
Assets definition above excludes
property related to Florida Rock’s ready
mix concrete operations located at the
Richmond quarry and Gilmerton yard
properties that is not necessary to the
operation of the quarry and coarse
aggregate yard, and specifically grant
back to the Acquirer the right to use real
property and facilities that are currently
used by both the coarse aggregate and
the ready mix operations.
The Divestiture Assets also include all
tangible assets used in or for the abovelisted quarries and yard as well as all
intangible assets used in the
development, production, servicing,
distribution, and sale of products
produced by or in the quarries or stored
in the yard.
The sale of the Divestiture Assets
according to the terms of the proposed
Final Judgment will ensure that
Vulcan’s acquisition of Florida Rock
does not harm competition in any of the
affected geographic areas.
B. Selected Provisions of the Proposed
Final Judgment
In antitrust cases involving mergers in
which the United States seeks a
divestiture remedy, it requires
completion of the divestiture within the
shortest time period reasonable under
the circumstances. A quick divestiture
has the benefits of restoring competition
lost in the acquisition and reducing the
possibility of dissipation of the value of
the assets. Paragraph IV(A) of the
proposed Final Judgment requires
Defendants to divest the Divestiture
Assets as viable ongoing businesses
within 90 days after the filing of the
Complaint in this matter or five days
after notice of the entry of the Final
Judgment by the Court, whichever is
later.2
Paragraph IV (D) provides that
Defendants shall not impede in any way
any person from competing for or
obtaining the lease to the Branscome
Chesapeake yard. This yard is owned by
a contractor who leases it to other
companies. Currently, the lessee is
Florida Rock, which barges coarse
aggregate to the yard to supply the
owner’s operations. The lease with
Florida Rock expires on December 31,
2007. Paragraph IV(D) is designed to
ensure that the buyer of the Florida
Rock Richmond quarry and Florida
Rock Gilmerton yard divestiture assets,
or any other interested party, has the
2 The Final Judgment also provides that this 90day time period may be extended by the United
States in its sole discretion for a total period not
exceeding 60 calendar days, and that the Court will
receive prior notice of any such extension.
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68191
opportunity to compete for the lease
upon its expiration.
The Vulcan quarry under
development in Butts County is not yet
operational, but Paragraph IV(F)
requires Defendants to warrant to the
Acquirer that they have obtained all
environmental, zoning, or other permits
required to begin production of coarse
aggregate at the Butts site.
Paragraph IV(J) of the proposed Final
Judgment provides that the sale of the
Divestiture Assets may be made to one
or more Acquirers, except that the
Richmond quarry and Gilmerton yard
must be divested to a single acquirer.
This provision ensures that the owner of
the barge-served quarry also owns a
barge-served distribution facility in
South Hampton Roads so that it can
compete effectively in South Hampton
Roads.
Paragraph IV(J) of the proposed Final
Judgment also provides that the assets
must be divested in such a way as to
satisfy the United States in its sole
discretion that the operations can and
will be operated by the purchaser as a
viable, ongoing business that can
compete effectively in the relevant
markets. The provisions of Paragraph IV
are designed to ensure that Defendants
take all reasonable steps necessary to
accomplish the divestitures quickly and
cooperate with prospective purchasers.
Finally, Paragraph V of the proposed
Final Judgment provides that in the
event that Defendants do not
accomplish the divestitures within the
periods prescribed in the proposed
Final Judgment, the Court will appoint
a trustee selected by the United States
to effect the divestitures. If a trustee is
appointed, the proposed Final Judgment
provides that Defendants will pay all
costs and expenses of the trustee. The
trustee’s commission will be structured
so as to provide an incentive for the
trustee based on the price obtained and
the speed with which the divestitures
are accomplished. After his or her
appointment becomes effective, the
trustee will file monthly reports with
the Court and the United States setting
forth his or her efforts to accomplish the
divestitures. If the divestitures have not
been accomplished at the end of six
months, the trustee and the United
States will make recommendations to
the Court, which shall enter such orders
as appropriate in order to carry out the
purpose of the trust, including
extending the trust or the term of the
trustee’s appointment.
IV. Remedies Available to Potential
Private Litigants
Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. 15, provides that any person who
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has been injured as a result of conduct
prohibited by the antitrust laws may
bring suit in federal court to recover
three times the damages the person has
suffered, as well as costs and reasonable
attorneys’ fees. Entry of the proposed
Final Judgment will neither impair nor
assist the bringing of any private
antitrust damage action. Under the
provisions of Section 5(a) of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(a), the proposed Final
Judgment has no prima facie effect in
any subsequent private lawsuit that may
be brought against Defendants.
V. Procedures Available for
Modification of the Proposed Final
Judgment
The United States and Defendants
have stipulated that the proposed Final
Judgment may be entered by the Court
after compliance with the provisions of
the APPA, provided that the United
States has not withdrawn its consent.
The APPA conditions entry upon the
Court’s determination that the proposed
Final Judgment is in the public interest.
The APPA provides a period of at
least sixty (60) days preceding the
effective date of the proposed Final
Judgment within which any person may
submit to the United States written
comments regarding the proposed Final
Judgment. Any person who wishes to
comment should do so within sixty (60)
days of the date of publication of this
Competitive Impact Statement in the
Federal Register, or the last date of
publication in a newspaper of the
summary of this Competitive Impact
Statement, whichever is later. All
comments received during this period
will be considered by the United States
Department of Justice, which remains
free to withdraw its consent to the
proposed Final Judgment at any time
prior to the Court’s entry of judgment.
The comments and the response of the
United States will be filed with the
Court and published in the Federal
Register.
Written comments should be
submitted to: Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief,
Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division,
United States Department of Justice,
1401 H St. NW., Suite 3000,
Washington, DC 20530.
The proposed Final Judgment
provides that the Court retains
jurisdiction over this action, and the
parties may apply to the Court for any
order necessary or appropriate for the
modification, interpretation, or
enforcement of the Final Judgment.
VI. Alternatives to the Proposed Final
Judgment
The United States considered, as an
alternative to the proposed Final
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Judgment, a full trial on the merits
against Defendants. The United States
could have continued the litigation and
sought preliminary and permanent
injunctions against Vulcan’s acquisition
of Florida Rock. The United States is
satisfied, however, that the divestiture
of assets described in the proposed
Final Judgment will preserve
competition in the production,
distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate
in the relevant geographic markets
identified by the United States. Thus,
the proposed Final Judgment would
achieve all or substantially all of the
relief the United States would have
obtained through litigation, but avoids
the time, expense, and uncertainty of a
full trial on the merits of the Complaint.
Vll. Standard of Review Under the
APPA for the Proposed Final Judgment
The Clayton Act, as amended by the
APPA, requires that proposed consent
judgments in antitrust cases brought by
the United States be subject to a sixtyday comment period, after which the
Court shall determine whether entry of
the proposed Final Judgment ‘‘is in the
public interest.’’ 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1). In
making that determination, the court, in
accordance with the statute as amended
in 2004, is required to consider:
(A) The competitive impact of such
judgment, including termination of alleged
violations, provisions for enforcement and
modification, duration of relief sought,
anticipated effects of alternative remedies
actually considered, whether its terms are
ambiguous, and any other competitive
considerations bearing upon the adequacy of
such judgment that the court deems
necessary to a determination of whether the
consent judgment is in the public interest;
and
(B) The impact of entry of such judgment
upon competition in the relevant market or
markets, upon the public generally and
individuals alleging specific injury from the
violations set forth in the complaint
including consideration of the public benefit,
if any, to be derived from a determination of
the issues at trial.
15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1)(A)–(B); see generally
United States v. SBC Commc’ns, Inc.,
489 F. Supp. 2d 1, 11 (D.D.C. 2007)
(concluding that the 2004 amendments
‘‘effected minimal changes’’ to scope of
review under Tunney Act, leaving
review ‘‘sharply proscribed by
precedent and the nature of Tunney Act
proceedings’’).3
As the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia Circuit has
3 The 2004 amendments substituted ‘‘shall’’ for
‘‘may’’ in directing relevant factors for the court to
consider and amended the list of factors to focus on
competitive considerations and to address
potentially ambiguous judgment terms. Compare 15
U.S.C. 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C. 16(e)(1) (2006).
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Frm 00071
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
held, under the APPA a court considers,
among other things, the relationship
between the remedy secured and the
specific allegations set forth in the
government’s complaint, whether the
decree is sufficiently clear, whether
enforcement mechanisms are sufficient,
and whether the decree may positively
harm third parties. See United States v.
Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1458–62
(DC Cir. 1995). With respect to the
adequacy of the relief secured by the
decree, a court may not ‘‘engage in an
unrestricted evaluation of what relief
would best serve the public.’’ United
States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d 456, 462
(9th Cir. 1988) (citing United States v.
Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th
Cir. 1981)); see also Microsoft, 56 F.3d
at 1460–62. Courts have held that:
[t]he balancing of competing social and
political interests affected by a proposed
antitrust consent decree must be left, in the
first instance, to the discretion of the
Attorney General. The court’s role in
protecting the public interest is one of
insuring that the government has not
breached its duty to the public in consenting
to the decree. The court is required to
determine not whether a particular decree is
the one that will best serve society, but
whether the settlement is ‘‘within the reaches
of the public interest.’’ More elaborate
requirements might undermine the
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by
consent decree.
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis
added) (citations omitted). 4 In making
its public interest determination, a
district court ‘‘must accord deference to
the government’s predictions about the
efficacy of its remedies, and may not
require that the remedies perfectly
match the alleged violations because
this may only reflect underlying
weakness in the government’s case or
concessions made during negotiation.’’
SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17;
see also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461
(noting the need for courts to be
‘‘deferential to the government’s
predictions as to the effect of the
proposed remedies’’); United States v.
Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F.
Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (noting that
the court should grant due respect to the
United States’ prediction as to the effect
of proposed remedies, its perception of
4 Cf. BNS, 858 F.2d at 464 (holding that the
court’s ‘‘ultimate authority under the [APPA] is
limited to approving or disapproving the consent
decree’’); United States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp.
713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975) (noting that, in this way,
the court is constrained to ‘‘look at the overall
picture not hypercritically, nor with a microscope,
but with an artist’s reducing glass’’). See generally
Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (discussing whether ‘‘the
remedies [obtained in the decree are] so
inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall
outside of the ‘reaches of the public interest’ ’’).
E:\FR\FM\04DEN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 232 / Tuesday, December 4, 2007 / Notices
68193
court to permit anyone to intervene.’’ 15
U.S.C. 16(e)(2). This instruction
explicitly writes into the statute the
standard intended by the Congress that
enacted the Tunney Act in 1974, as
Senator Tunney then explained: ‘‘[t]he
court is nowhere compelled to go to trial
or to engage in extended proceedings
which might have the effect of vitiating
the benefits of prompt and less costly
settlement through the consent decree
process.’’ 119 Cong. Rec. 24,598 (1973)
(statement of Senator Tunney). Rather,
the procedure for the public interest
determination is left to the discretion of
the court, with the recognition that the
court’s ‘‘scope of review remains
sharply proscribed by precedent and the
nature of Tunney Act proceedings.’’
SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11. 5
Schedule
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
the market structure, and its views of
the nature of the case).
Court approval of a consent decree
requires a standard more flexible and
less strict than that appropriate to court
adoption of a litigated decree following
a finding of liability. ‘‘[A] proposed
decree must be approved even if it falls
short of the remedy the court would
impose on its own, as long as it falls
within the range of acceptability or is
‘within the reaches of public interest.’ ’’
United States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552
F. Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982)
(citations omitted) (quoting United
States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713,
716 (D. Mass. 1975)), aff’d sub nom.
Maryland v. United States, 460 U.S.
1001 (1983); see also United States v.
Alcan Aluminum Ltd., 605 F. Supp. 619,
622 (W.D. Ky. 1985) (approving the
consent decree even though the court
would have imposed a greater remedy).
To meet this standard, the United States
‘‘need only provide a factual basis for
concluding that the settlements are
reasonably adequate remedies for the
alleged harms.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 17.
Moreover, the Court’s role under the
APPA is limited to reviewing the
remedy in relationship to the violations
that the United States has alleged in its
Complaint, and does not authorize the
Court to ‘‘construct [its] own
hypothetical case and then evaluate the
decree against that case.’’ Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1459. Because the ‘‘court’s
authority to review the decree depends
entirely on the government’s exercising
its prosecutorial discretion by bringing
a case in the first place,’’ it follows that
‘‘the court is only authorized to review
the decree itself,’’ and not to ‘‘effectively
redraft the complaint’’ to inquire into
other matters that the United States did
not pursue. Id. at 1459–60. As this court
recently confirmed in SBC
Communications, courts ‘‘cannot look
beyond the complaint in making the
public interest determination unless the
complaint is drafted so narrowly as to
make a mockery of judicial power.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 15.
In its 2004 amendments, Congress
made clear its intent to preserve the
practical benefits of utilizing consent
decrees in antitrust enforcement, adding
the unambiguous instruction ‘‘[n]othing
in this section shall be construed to
require the court to conduct an
evidentiary hearing or to require the
5 See United States v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp.
2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000) (noting that the ‘‘Tunney
Act expressly allows the court to make its public
interest determination on the basis of the
competitive impact statement and response to
comments alone’’); S. Rep. No. 93–298, 93d Cong.,
1st Sess., at 6 (1973) (‘‘Where the public interest can
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17:38 Dec 03, 2007
Jkt 214001
VIII. Determinative Documents
There are no determinative materials
or documents within the meaning of the
APPA that were considered by the
United States in formulating the
proposed Final Judgment.
Dated: November 13, 2007.
Respectfully submitted,
Robert W. Wilder, Esquire,
United States Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, Litigation II Section, 1401
H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC
20530 (202) 307–6336
[FR Doc. 07–5902 Filed 12–3–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–11–M
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
Drug
Methadone Intermediate (9254) ...
Dextropropoxyphene, bulk (nondosage forms) (9273).
Fentanyl (9801) ............................
II
II
II
The company plans to manufacture
the listed controlled substances in bulk
for sale to its customers for formulation
into finished pharmaceuticals.
No comments or objections have been
received. DEA has considered the
factors in 21 U.S.C. 823(a) and
determined that the registration of
Boehringer Ingelheim Chemicals, Inc. to
manufacture the listed basic classes of
controlled substances is consistent with
the public interest at this time. DEA has
investigated Boehringer Ingelheim
Chemicals, Inc. to ensure that the
company’s registration is consistent
with the public interest. The
investigation has included inspection
and testing of the company’s physical
security systems, verification of the
company’s compliance with state and
local laws, and a review of the
company’s background and history.
Therefore, pursuant to 21 U.S.C. 823,
and in accordance with 21 CFR 1301.33,
the above named company is granted
registration as a bulk manufacturer of
the basic classes of controlled
substances listed.
Dated: November 26, 2007.
Joseph T. Rannazzisi,
Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement
Administration.
[FR Doc. E7–23480 Filed 12–3–07; 8:45 am]
Manufacturer of Controlled
Substances; Notice of Registration
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
By Notice dated August 16, 2007, and
published in the Federal Register on
August 27, 2007 (72 FR 49018),
Boehringer Ingelheim Chemicals, Inc.,
2820 N. Normandy Drive, Petersburg,
Virginia 23805, made application by
renewal to the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) to be registered as
a bulk manufacturer of the basic classes
of controlled substances listed in
schedules I and II:
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug
Schedule
Tetrahydrocannabinols (7370) .....
Amphetamine (1100) ....................
Methylphenidate (1724) ................
Methadone (9250) ........................
I
II
II
II
be meaningfully evaluated simply on the basis of
briefs and oral arguments, that is the approach that
should be utilized.’’); United States v. Mid-Am.
Dairymen, Inc., 1977–1 Trade Cas. (CCH) ¶ 61,508,
at 71,980 (W.D. Mo. 1977) (‘‘Absent a showing of
corrupt failure of the government to discharge its
duty, the Court, in making its public interest
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Drug Enforcement Administration
Manufacturer of Controlled
Substances; Notice of Registration
By Notice dated August 16, 2007, and
published in the Federal Register on
August 28, 2007, (72 FR 49315–49316),
Cerilliant Corporation, 811 Paloma
Drive, Suite A, Round Rock, Texas
78664, made application by renewal to
the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) to be registered as a bulk
manufacturer of the basic classes of
controlled substances listed in
schedules I and II:
finding, should* * * carefully consider the
explanations of the government in the competitive
impact statement and its responses to comments in
order to determine whether those explanations are
reasonable under the circumstances.’’).
E:\FR\FM\04DEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 232 (Tuesday, December 4, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 68180-68193]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-5902]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ANTITRUST DIVISION
United States v. Vulcan Materials Co., et al. Proposed Final
Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), that a proposed Final Judgment and
Competitive Impact Statement have been filed with the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia in United States v. Vulcan
Materials Co., et al., Civil Action No. 1:07-cv-2044. On November 13,
2007, the United States filed a Complaint to obtain equitable and other
relief against defendants Vulcan Materials Company (``Vulcan'') and
Florida Rock Industries, Inc. (``Florida Rock'') to prevent Vulcan's
proposed acquisition of Florida Rock. The Complaint alleges that
Vulcan's acquisition of Florida Rock would substantially lessen
competition in the production, distribution, and sale of coarse
aggregate in and around Atlanta, Georgia; Columbus, Georgia;
Chattanooga, Tennessee; and South Hampton Roads, Virginia, in violation
of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18. The proposed
Final Judgment, filed on November 13, 2007, requires defendants to
divest Florida Rock aggregate quarries in Northwest, West, and
Southwest Atlanta, Georgia; Columbus, Georgia; Chattanooga, Tennessee;
and Richmond, Virginia. In addition, defendants must divest a Florida
Rock distribution yard located in Chesapeake, Virginia that receives
coarse aggregate by barge from Florida Rock's Richmond quarry; a Vulcan
aggregate quarry in South Atlanta, Georgia; and a Vulcan quarry under
development in Southeast Atlanta, Georgia.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive
Impact Statement are available for inspection at the Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, Antitrust Documents Group, 325 7th Street,
NW., Room 215, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-514-2481), on the
Department of Justice's Web site at https://www.usdoj.gov/atr, and at
the Office of the Clerk of the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, Washington, DC. Copies of these materials may be
obtained from the Antitrust Division upon request and payment of a
copying fee set by Department of Justice regulations.
Public comment is invited within 60 days of the date of this
notice. Such comments, and responses thereto, will be published in the
Federal Register and filed with the Court. Comments should be directed
to Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division,
U.S. Department of Justice, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington,
DC 20530 (telephone: 202-307-0924).
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations, Antitrust Division.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington, DC 20530,
Plaintiff, v. Vulcan Materials Company, 1200 Urban Center Drive,
Birmingham, AL 35242, and Florida Rock Industries, Inc., 155 East
21st Street, Jacksonville, FL 32206, Defendants.
Case: 1:07-cv-02044
Assigned To: Sullivan, Emmet G.
Assign. Date: 11/13/2007
Description: Antitrust
Deck Type: Antitrust
Date Stamp:
Complaint
Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), acting
under the direction of the Acting Attorney General of the United
States, brings this civil antitrust action to obtain equitable and
other relief against defendants Vulcan Materials Company (``Vulcan'')
and Florida Rock Industries, Inc. (``Florida Rock'') to prevent
Vulcan's proposed acquisition of Florida Rock. Plaintiff complains and
alleges as follows:
I. Nature of the Action
1. On February 19, 2007, Vulcan and Florida Rock signed a
definitive agreement for Vulcan to acquire Florida Rock in a cash-and-
stock transaction valued at approximately $4.6 billion. The total
blended cash-and-stock consideration for this transaction is
approximately $68 per share.
2. Vulcan and Florida Rock both produce and distribute in the
United States building materials, including, among other things,
construction aggregates (which includes coarse aggregate) and ready mix
concrete. Vulcan is the largest supplier of construction aggregates in
the United States. Florida Rock is also a leading supplier of
construction aggregates in the United States. Combined, Vulcan and
Florida Rock will have construction aggregates reserves totaling
approximately 13.9 billion tons.
3. The United States brings this action to prevent the proposed
acquisition of Florida Rock by Vulcan because it would substantially
lessen competition in the production, distribution, and sale of coarse
aggregate in and around Atlanta, Georgia; Columbus, Georgia;
Chattanooga, Tennessee; and South Hampton Roads, Virginia, in violation
of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
II. Parties to the Proposed Transaction
4. Defendant Vulcan is a New Jersey corporation with its principal
place of business in Birmingham, Alabama. Vulcan produces, distributes,
and sells, among other products, construction aggregates, ready mix
concrete, hot mix asphalt, and asphalt coating to customers in 21
states, the District of Columbia, and Mexico.
5. Vulcan is the largest producer of construction aggregates in the
United States. It has over 300 facilities for the
[[Page 68181]]
production and distribution of construction aggregates and other
products. In 2006, Vulcan shipped approximately 255 million tons of
construction aggregates, the majority of which was coarse aggregate. In
2006, Vulcan reported total sales of approximately $3 billion.
6. Defendant Florida Rock is a Florida corporation with its
principal place of business in Jacksonville, Florida. Florida Rock
produces, distributes, and sells in the Southeastern and mid-Atlantic
states, among other products, construction aggregates, ready mix
concrete, prestressed concrete, and cement.
7. Florida Rock is one of the largest United States suppliers of
construction aggregates. In 2006, Florida Rock shipped approximately 45
million tons of construction aggregates, the majority of which was
coarse aggregate. In 2006, Florida Rock reported total sales of
approximately $1.4 billion.
III. Jurisdiction and Venue
8. Plaintiff United States brings this action under Section 15 of
the Clayton Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 25, to prevent and restrain
defendants from violating Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
9. Defendants produce, distribute, and sell coarse aggregate and
other products in the flow of interstate commerce. Defendants'
activities in producing, distributing, and seIling these products
substantially affect interstate commerce. This Court has subject matter
jurisdiction over this action pursuant to Section 12 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 22, and 28 U.S.C. 1331, 1337(a), and 1345.
10. Defendants have consented to venue and personal jurisdiction in
this judicial district.
IV. Trade and Commerce
A. The Relevant Product Market
11. Construction aggregates consist primarily of crushed stone,
gravel, and sand produced from natural deposits of various materials
and removed from quarries, mines, or pits.
12. Coarse aggregate is a type of construction aggregate. Coarse
aggregate is crushed stone produced at quarries or mines and used for,
among other things, road base and the production of ready mix concrete
and asphalt. Coarse aggregate typically is mixed with other materials
to produce ready mix concrete and asphalt. Different sizes of coarse
aggregate are needed to meet different project specifications.
13. There are no reliable substitutes for coarse aggregate because
it differs from other products in its physical composition, functional
characteristics, customary uses, consistent availability, and pricing.
To the extent that any substitutes exist, customers already use these
to the full extent possible in light of the limits on their
availability and the amounts that can be used in a given product, and
could not use more of them in place of coarse aggregate in response to
an increase in the price of coarse aggregate.
14. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate would not cause the purchasers of coarse aggregate
to substitute another product or otherwise reduce their usage of coarse
aggregate in sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable.
15. Accordingly, the production, distribution, and sale of coarse
aggregate is a line of commerce and a relevant product market within
the meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
B. The Relevant Geographic Markets
16. Coarse aggregate is a bulky, heavy, and relatively low-value
product. The cost of transporting coarse aggregate is high compared to
the value of the product.
17. Transportation costs limit the distance coarse aggregate can be
economically transported from a quarry or mine to a job site or a ready
mix concrete or asphalt plant. The geographic area within which a
coarse aggregate supplier can compete most vigorously thus is limited
by the cost of hauling the coarse aggregate. As a result, the
competitiveness of a coarse aggregate supplier in a given area is
limited by its distance from customer plants or project sites relative
to other suppliers.
18. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Cedarton, Georgia, known as the Six Mile quarry. This quarry
serves a geographic area that includes, among other areas, all or part
of Floyd, Polk, Haralson, and Bartow Counties in Georgia (hereafter
referred to as ``Northwest Atlanta''). Customers with plants or jobs
within Northwest Atlanta may, depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan's
Adairsville, Bartow, and Rockmart quarries and from another
competitor's quarry located in Cartersville, Georgia. Other quarries
cannot on a regular basis compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in Northwest Atlanta because they are too far away and
the hauling costs are too great.
19. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in Northwest
Atlanta would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate
from quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 18 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
20. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Yorkville, Georgia, known as the Paulding quarry. This
quarry serves a geographic area that includes, among other areas, all
or part of Paulding, Douglas, Carroll, Haralson, Polk, and Cobb
Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred to as ``West Atlanta'').
Customers with plants or jobs within West Atlanta may, depending on the
location of their plant or job sites, also economically procure coarse
aggregate from Vulcan's Villa Rica, Kennesaw, and Lithia Springs
quarries and from the quarries of other competitors located in Dallas,
Georgia, and Douglasville, Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a regular
basis compete successfully for customers with plants or jobs in West
Atlanta because they are too far away and the hauling costs are too
great.
21. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in West Atlanta
would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate from
quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 20 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
22. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Tyrone, Georgia, known as the Tyrone quarry. This quarry
serves a geographic area that includes, among other areas, all or part
of Fulton, Coweta, Fayette, and Clayton Counties in Georgia (hereafter
referred to as ``Southwest Atlanta''). Customers with plants or jobs
within Southwest Atlanta may, depending on the location of their plant
or job sites, also economically procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan's
Madras quarry and from another competitor's quarry located in Tyrone,
Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a regular basis compete successfully
for customers with plants or jobs in Southwest Atlanta because they are
too far away and the hauling costs are too great.
23. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in Southwest
Atlanta would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate
from quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 22 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
[[Page 68182]]
24. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Riverdale, Georgia, known as the Forest Park quarry. This
quarry serves a geographic area that includes, among other areas, all
or part of Fulton, Clayton, Henry, DeKalb, and Fayette Counties in
Georgia (hereafter referred to as ``South Atlanta''). Customers with
plants or jobs within South Atlanta may, depending on the location of
their plant or job sites, also economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan's Red Oak quarry and from another competitor's quarry
located in College Park, Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a regular
basis compete successfully for customers with plants or jobs in South
Atlanta because they are too far away and the hauling costs are too
great.
25. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in South Atlanta
would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate from
quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 24 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
26. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Zotella, Georgia, known as the Griffin quarry. This quarry
serves a geographic area that includes, among other areas, all or part
of Spalding and Henry Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred to as
``Southeast Atlanta''). Customers with plants or jobs within Southeast
Atlanta may, depending on the location of their plant or job sites,
also economically procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan's Stockbridge
quarry. In addition, Vulcan is in the process of opening a new quarry
in Butts County, Georgia, expected to be operational in 2008, from
which it plans to serve, among other areas, customers in all or part of
Southeast Atlanta. Other quarries cannot on a regular basis compete
successfully for customers with plants or jobs in Southeast Atlanta
because they are too far away and the hauling costs are too great.
27. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in Southeast
Atlanta would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate
from quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 26 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
28. Florida Rock owns a majority interest in a company that owns
and operates a coarse aggregate quarry located in Columbus, Georgia,
known as the Columbus quarry. This quarry serves a geographic area that
includes, among other areas, all or part of Muscogee and Harris
Counties in Georgia (hereafter referred to as ``Columbus''). Customers
with plants or jobs within Columbus may, depending on the location of
their plant or job sites, also economically procure coarse aggregate
from Vulcan's Barin quarry and from another competitor's quarry located
in Midland, Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a regular basis compete
successfully for customers with plants or jobs in Columbus because they
are too far away and the hauling costs are too great.
29. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in Columbus would
not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate from quarries
farther away than those identified in paragraph 28 in sufficient
quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
30. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Chattanooga, Tennessee, known as the Jersey Pike quarry.
This quarry serves a geographic area that includes, among other areas,
all or part of Hamilton County in Tennessee (hereafter referred to as
``Chattanooga''). Customers with plants or jobs within Chattanooga may,
depending on the location of their plant or job sites, also
economically procure coarse aggregate from Vulcan's Chattanooga quarry
and from another competitor's quarries located in Chattanooga and
Ringgold, Georgia. Other quarries cannot on a regular basis compete
successfully for customers with plants or jobs in Chattanooga because
they are too far away and the hauling costs are too great.
31. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in Chattanooga
would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate from
quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 30 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
32. Florida Rock owns and operates a coarse aggregate quarry
located in Richmond, Virginia, known as the Richmond quarry, a coarse
aggregate quarry located in Havre de Grace, Maryland, known as the
Havre de Grace quarry, and a barge-served distribution yard located in
Chesapeake, Virginia, known as the Gilmerton yard. Florida Rock also
operates a distribution yard owned by a third party located in
Chesapeake, Virginia. Via these distribution yards, Florida Rock serves
a geographic area that includes, among other areas, all or part of the
cities of Norfolk, Suffolk, Portsmouth, Chesapeake, and Virginia Beach
in Virginia (hereafter referred to as ``South Hampton Roads'').
Customers with plants or jobs within South Hampton Roads may, depending
on the location of their plant or job sites, also economically procure
coarse aggregate from Vulcan rail and barge terminals supplied by
Vulcan's Richmond, Lawrenceville, and Skippers quarries. Other quarries
cannot on a regular basis compete successfully for customers with
plants or jobs in South Hampton Roads because they do not have
appropriate distribution facilities in the area and/or quarries
similarly proximate to rail lines or navigable water sources.
33. A small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price
of coarse aggregate to customers with plants or jobs in South Hampton
Roads would not cause those customers to procure coarse aggregate from
quarries farther away than those identified in paragraph 32 in
sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase unprofitable.
34. Accordingly, the relevant geographic markets, within the
meaning of Section of the Clayton Act, are locations of coarse
aggregate customers in: Northwest Atlanta, West Atlanta, Southwest
Atlanta, South Atlanta, Southeast Atlanta, Columbus, Chattanooga, and
South Hampton Roads.
C. Anticompetitive Effects
1. The Proposed Transaction Will Harm Competition in the Markets for
Coarse Aggregate in the Relevant Geographic Markets
35. Price competition between Vulcan and Florida Rock in the
production, distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate has benefited
customers.
36. In Southeast Atlanta and South Hampton Roads, the proposed
acquisition will eliminate the competition between Vulcan and Florida
Rock and reduce the number of suppliers of many specifications of
coarse aggregate from two to one. In Southeast Atlanta, the acquisition
will also eliminate the competition between Florida Rock and Vulcan
that would result from the opening of Vulcan's new quarry in Butts
County.
37. In Northwest Atlanta, Southwest Atlanta, South Atlanta,
Columbus, and Chattanooga, the proposed acquisition will eliminate the
competition between Vulcan and Florida Rock and reduce the number of
coarse aggregate suppliers from three to two generally, and for some
customers and projects from two to one.
38. In West Atlanta, the proposed acquisition will eliminate the
[[Page 68183]]
competition between Vulcan and Florida Rock and reduce the number of
coarse aggregate suppliers from four to three generally, and for some
customers and projects from three to two.
39. The proposed acquisition will substantially increase the
likelihood that Vulcan will unilaterally increase the price of coarse
aggregate to a significant number of customers in Northwest Atlanta,
West Atlanta, Southwest Atlanta, South Atlanta, Southeast Atlanta,
Columbus, Chattanooga, and South Hampton Roads.
40. The response of other coarse aggregate suppliers in the
relevant geographic markets would not be sufficient to constrain a
unilateral exercise of market power by Vulcan after the acquisition
because those suppliers likely would not have sufficient capacity and/
or incentives to increase production and sales enough to defeat an
anticompetitive price increase by Vulcan. State permits and county
zoning restrictions in many cases limit quarries' hours of operation
and/or production levels, and many coarse aggregate suppliers face
practical limitations on the amount of truck traffic their facilities
can handle. Moreover, because coarse aggregate mined from quarries is a
depletable natural resource and every quarry has finite reserves, every
sale by a supplier today represents a tradeoff against future sales.
41. In addition, and notwithstanding competitor responses, post-
merger Vulcan will be able to increase prices to those customers that
have plants or job sites for which both a Vulcan quarry and a Florida
Rock quarry are closer than any other quarries producing coarse
aggregate meeting their specifications. Coarse aggregate suppliers know
the locations of their competitors' quarries and the distance from
their own quarries and their competitors' quarries to a customer's
plant or job site. Generally, because of transportation costs, the
farther a supplier's closest competitor is from a job site, the less
price competition that supplier faces for that project. Post-
acquisition, in instances where Vulcan and Florida Rock quarries would
be the closest quarries to a customer's plant or project and the next
closest coarse aggregate supplier's plant is farther from the
customer's plant or project, the combined firm, using the knowledge of
its competitors' quarry locations, would be able to charge such
customers higher prices.
42. Without the constraint of competition between Vulcan and
Florida Rock, the combined firm will have a greater ability to exercise
market power by raising prices to customers for whom Vulcan or Florida
Rock were sources of coarse aggregate.
43. In addition, Vulcan's elimination of Florida Rock as an
independent competitor in the production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate is likely to facilitate anticompetitive coordination
among the remaining coarse aggregate suppliers in Northwest Atlanta,
West Atlanta, Southwest Atlanta, South Atlanta, Columbus, and
Chattanooga. Coarse aggregate is homogeneous and suppliers have access
to information about competitors' output, capacity, and costs. Given
these market conditions, eliminating one of the few coarse aggregate
competitors is likely to further increase the ability of the remaining
competitors to coordinate successfully.
44. The transaction therefore will substantially lessen competition
in the production, distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate in the
relevant geographic markets. This is likely to lead to higher prices
for the ultimate consumers of coarse aggregate, in violation of Section
7 of the Clayton Act.
2. Entry Is Not Likely To Deter the Exercise of Market Power
45. Timely and successful entry into the production, distribution,
and sale of coarse aggregate is unlikely in the relevant geographic
areas.
46. Securing the proper site for a coarse aggregate quarry or mine
is difficult, time-consuming, and costly. It requires the investigation
and extensive testing of candidate sites, as well as negotiating
necessary land transfers, leases, and/or easements. The location of a
quarry, mine, or yard is important due to the high cost of transporting
coarse aggregate, but there are few sites, especially in metropolitan
areas, on which to locate coarse aggregate operations.
47. Due to the geology in South Hampton Roads, coarse aggregate for
most applications in South Hampton Roads is produced outside the area.
For an entrant to compete effectively in South Hampton Roads with a
combined Vulcan and Florida Rock, that entrant must pair a new or
existing rail- or water-served quarry with a distribution yard in the
South Hampton Roads area that is capable of receiving coarse aggregate
from such a quarry. Rail- or water-served quarries situated to compete
effectively in South Hampton Roads, and the proper sites for
distribution yards to serve those quarries, are scarce.
48. Obtaining necessary zoning variances and governmental permits
for a coarse aggregate quarry or mine also can be difficult, time-
consuming, and costly. In metropolitan areas, land of the necessary
size and geology often is already utilized or does not have the
appropriate zoning, and obtaining zoning variances can be extremely
difficult. Attempts to open a new coarse aggregate quarry or mine,
especially in metropolitan areas (such as West Atlanta, Southwest
Atlanta, South Atlanta, Columbus, Chattanooga, and South Hampton Roads)
but also frequently in rural areas, often face fierce public
opposition. This public opposition can prevent a coarse aggregate
quarry or mine from opening or make opening it much more time-consuming
and costly. In addition, state and federal water, air quality, and
other permitting process requirements must be met.
49. Even after a quarry or mine site is acquired and properly zoned
and permitted, the owner must spend significant time and resources to
prepare the land and install the equipment necessary to run the
operation.
50. Therefore, entry by any other firm into the coarse aggregate
market in the relevant geographic areas will not be timely, likely, or
sufficient to defeat an anticompetitive price increase.
V. Violations Alleged
51. The proposed acquisition of Florida Rock by Vulcan would
substantially lessen competition and tend to create a monopoly in
interstate trade and commerce in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 18.
52. Unless restrained, the transaction will have the following
anticompetitive effects, among others:
a. Actual and potential competition between Vulcan and Florida Rock
in the production, distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate in the
relevant geographic markets will be eliminated;
b. Competition generally in the production, distribution, and sale
of coarse aggregate in the relevant geographic markets will be
substantially lessened; and
c. Prices for coarse aggregate in the relevant geographic markets
likely will increase.
VI. Request for Relief
53. Plaintiff requests that:
a. Vulcan's proposed acquisition of Florida Rock be adjudged and
decreed to be unlawful and in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 18;
[[Page 68184]]
b. Defendants and all persons acting on their behalf be permanently
enjoined and restrained from consummating the proposed acquisition or
from entering into or carrying out any contract, agreement, plan, or
understanding, the effect of which would be to combine Vulcan with the
operations of Florida Rock;
c. Plaintiff be awarded its costs for this action; and
d. Plaintiff receive such other and further relief as the Court
deems just and proper.
Respectfully submitted,
For Plaintiff United States of America:
Thomas O. Barnett,
Assistant Attorney General D.C. Bar #426840
David L. Meyer,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General D.C. Bar #414420
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section D.C. Bar #435204
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section D.C. Bar #439469
Robert W. Wilder,
Helena Gardner,
Christine A. Hill (D.C. Bar 461048),
Leslie Peritz,
Lowell Stern (D.C. Bar 440487),
James S. Yoon (D.C. Bar 491309),
Attorneys, United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division,
Litigation II Section, 1401 H Street, NW., Suite 3000, Washington,
DC 20530, (202) 307-6336
Dated: November 13, 2007
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Vulcan Materials Company
and Florida Rock Industries, Inc., Defendants.
Case No.:
Judge:
Deck Type: Antitrust
Date Stamp:
Final Judgment
Whereas, plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Complaint
on November 13, 2007, and plaintiff and defendants, Vulcan Materials
Company (``Vulcan'') and Florida Rock Industries, Inc. (``Florida
Rock''), by their respective attorneys, have consented to the entry of
this Final Judgment without trial or adjudication of any issue of fact
or law, and without this Final Judgment constituting any evidence
against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
And whereas, defendants agree to be bound by the provisions of this
Final Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
And whereas, the essence of this Final Judgment is the prompt and
certain divestiture of certain rights or assets by defendants to assure
that competition is not substantially lessened;
And whereas, the United States requires defendants to make certain
divestitures for the purpose of remedying the loss of competition
alleged in the Complaint;
And whereas, defendants have represented to the United States that
the divestitures required below can and will be made and that
defendants will later raise no claim of hardship or difficulty as
grounds for asking the Court to modify any of the divestiture
provisions contained below;
Now therefore, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
parties, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed:
I. Jurisdiction
This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of and each of
the parties to this action. The Complaint states a claim upon which
relief may be granted against defendants under Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 18.
II. Definitions
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ``Acquirer'' or ``Acquirers'' means the entity or entities to
whom defendants divest some or all of the Divestiture Assets.
B. ``Coarse aggregate'' means crushed stone produced at quarries or
mines and used for, among other things, road base and the production of
ready mix concrete and asphalt.
C. ``Divestiture Assets'' means:
1. The following quarries and yard:
a. The Florida Rock Six Mile quarry, located at 3785 Cave Springs
Road, Cedarton, Georgia;
b. The Florida Rock Paulding quarry, located at 112 Quarry Road,
Yorkville, Georgia;
c. The Florida Rock Tyrone quarry, located at 240 Rockwood Road,
Tyrone, Georgia;
d. The Vulcan Red Oak quarry, located at 5414 Buffington Road, Red
Oak, Georgia;
e. The Vulcan quarry under development in Butts County, located on
Greer Dairy Road, Jackson, Georgia;
f. The Florida Rock interest in Columbus Quarry LLC, which owns the
Columbus quarry, located at 3001 Smith Road, Columbus, Georgia;
g. The Florida Rock Jersey Pike quarry, located at 2 Pelican Drive,
Chattanooga, Tennessee;
h. The Florida Rock Richmond quarry, located at 2100 Deepwater
Terminal Road, Richmond, Virginia (but excluding the Florida Rock ready
mix concrete plant, the real property necessary for the operation of
the plant (provided the conveyance of such property does not interfere
with the operation of the Richmond quarry), and all other tangible and
intangible assets exclusively used in the plant's operations) and, at
the option of the Acquirer, use of the real property, parking lot,
equipment shop, and office building equivalent to that which Florida
Rock currently has for its quarry operations; and
i. The Florida Rock Gilmerton yard, located at 4606 Bainbridge
Boulevard, Chesapeake, Virginia (but excluding the Florida Rock ready
mix concrete plant, the real property necessary for the operation of
the plant (provided the conveyance of such property does not interfere
with the operation of the Gilmerton yard), and all other tangible and
intangible assets exclusively used in the plant's operations) and, at
the option of the Acquirer, use of the real property, parking lot,
equipment shop, fuel station, and office building equivalent to that
which Florida Rock currently has for its operation of the yard;
2. All tangible assets used in or for the quarries and yard listed
in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a) through (i), including but not limited to all
research and development activities (except for any such research and
development activities that are principally devoted to either
defendant's operations as a whole and not specifically to the
operations of the quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a)
through (i), and that are not necessary to the operation of the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a) through (i)),
equipment, tooling and fixed assets, real property (leased or owned),
personal property, inventory, coarse aggregate reserves, office
furniture, materials, supplies, on- or off-site warehouses or storage
facilities relating to the quarries and yard; all licenses, permits,
and authorizations issued by any governmental organization relating to
the quarries and yard; all contracts, teaming arrangements, agreements,
leases (including renewal rights), commitments, certifications, and
understandings relating to the quarries and yard, including sales
agreements and supply agreements; all customer lists, contracts,
accounts, and credit records relating to the quarries and yard; all
repair and performance records and all other records relating to the
quarries and yard; at the option of the Acquirer or Acquirers, a number
of trucks, rail cars, and other vehicles usable at the
[[Page 68185]]
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a) through (i) equal
to, for each separate type of truck, rail car, or other vehicle, the
average number of trucks, rail cars, and other vehicles of that type,
owned or controlled by defendants, used at each such quarry or yard per
month during the months of operation of the quarry or yard between
January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2006 (calculated by averaging the
number of trucks, rail cars, and other vehicles of each type, owned or
controlled by defendants, that were used at each quarry or yard at any
time during each month that the quarry or yard was in operation); and
at the option of the Acquirer or Acquirers, a number of barges usable
at the quarry and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(h) and (i) equal
to, for each separate type of barge, the average number of barges of
that type, owned or controlled by defendants, used at such quarry or
yard per month during the months of operation of the quarry or yard
between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2006 (calculated by averaging
the number of barges of that type, owned or controlled by defendants,
that were used at such quarry or yard at any time during each month
that the quarry or yard was in operation); and
3. All intangible assets used in the development, production,
servicing, distribution, and sale of products produced by or in the
quarries or stored in the yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a) through
(i), including but not limited to all contractual rights (except for
any such contractual rights that are principally devoted to either
defendant's operations as a whole and not specifically to the
operations of the quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a)
through (i), and that are not necessary to the operation of the
quarries and yard listed in Paragraphs II(C)(1)(a) through (i)),
patents, licenses and sub-licenses, intellectual property rights,
copyrights, trademarks, trade names, service marks, service names,
technical information, know-how, trade secrets, drawings, blueprints,
designs, design protocols, specifications for materials, specifications
for parts and devices, safety procedures for the handling of materials
and substances, quality assurance and control procedures, all manuals
and technical information defendants provide to their own employees,
customers, suppliers, agents, or licensees, and all research data
(including coarse aggregate reserve testing information) concerning
historic and current research and development efforts relating to the
quarries and yard, including but not limited to designs of experiments
and the results of successful and unsuccessful designs and experiments.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Final Judgment, if
requested by an Acquirer, and subject to approval by the United States
in its sole discretion, defendants shall offer to enter into a
transition services agreement with respect to computer software
(including dispatch software and management information systems) and
related documentation, and design tools and simulation capability.
D. ``Florida Rock'' means defendant Florida Rock Industries, Inc.,
a Florida corporation with its headquarters in Jacksonville, Florida,
its successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships and joint ventures, and their directors,
officers, managers, agents, and employees.
E. ``Vulcan'' means defendant Vulcan Materials Company, a New
Jersey corporation with its headquarters in Birmingham, Alabama, its
successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups,
affiliates, partnerships and joint ventures, and their directors,
officers, managers, agents, and employees.
III. Applicability
A. This Final Judgment applies to Vulcan and Florida Rock, as
defined above, and all other persons in active concert or participation
with Vulcan or Florida Rock who receive actual notice of this Final
Judgment by personal service or otherwise.
B. If, prior to complying with Sections IV and V of this Final
Judgment, defendants sell or otherwise dispose of all or substantially
all of their assets or of lesser business units that include the
Divestiture Assets, they shall require the purchaser to be bound by the
provisions of this Final Judgment. Defendants need not obtain such an
agreement from the acquirers of the assets divested pursuant to this
Final Judgment.
IV. Divestitures
A. Defendants are ordered and directed, within ninety (90) calendar
days after the filing of the Complaint in this matter, or five (5) days
after notice of the entry of this Final Judgment by the Court,
whichever is later, to divest the Divestiture Assets in a manner
consistent with this Final Judgment to an Acquirer or Acquirers
acceptable to the United States in its sole discretion. The United
States, in its sole discretion, may agree to one or more extensions of
this time period, not to exceed in total sixty (60) calendar days, and
shall notify the Court in each such circumstance. Defendants agree to
use their best efforts to divest the Divestiture Assets as
expeditiously as possible.
B. In accomplishing the divestitures ordered by this Final
Judgment, defendants promptly shall make known, by usual and customary
means, the availability of the Divestiture Assets. Defendants shall
inform any person making inquiry regarding a possible purchase of the
Divestiture Assets that they are being divested pursuant to this Final
Judgment and provide that person with a copy of this Final Judgment.
Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing, defendants
shall offer to furnish to all prospective Acquirers, subject to
customary confidentiality assurances, all information and documents
relating to the Divestiture Assets customarily provided in a due
diligence process except such information or documents subject to the
attorney-client or work-product privileges. Defendants shall make
available such information to the United States at the same time that
such information is made available to any other person.
C. Defendants shall not take any action that win impede in any way
any person from competing for or obtaining the lease to the Branscome
Chesapeake yard, located at 120 Dominion Boulevard, Chesapeake,
Virginia.
D. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing,
defendants shall provide the Acquirer or Acquirers and the United
States information relating to personnel involved in production,
operations, development, and sales at the Divestiture Assets to enable
the Acquirer or Acquirers to make offers of employment. Defendants
shall not interfere with any negotiations by the Acquirer or Acquirers
to employ any employee of the Divestiture Assets whose primary
responsibility is production, operations, development, or sales at the
Divestiture Assets.
E. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing,
defendants shall permit prospective Acquirers of the Divestiture Assets
to have reasonable access to personnel and to make inspections of the
physical facilities of the Divestiture Assets; access to any and all
environmental, zoning, and other permit documents and information; and
access to any and all financial, operational, or other documents and
information customarily provided as part of a due diligence process.
F. With the exception of the Butts County site listed in Paragraph
II(C)(1)(e), defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer or Acquirers that
each asset will be operational on the date of sale. Vulcan shall
further warrant to the Acquirer that it has obtained all environmental,
zoning, or other permits required to produce coarse aggregate at
[[Page 68186]]
the Vulcan quarry under development in Butts County, identified in
Paragraph II(C)(1)(e), and that such permits are transferable to the
Acquirer.
G. Defendants shall not take any action that will impede in any way
the permitting, operation, or divestiture of the Divestiture Assets.
H. Defendants shall warrant to the Acquirer or Acquirers that there
are no material defects in the environmental, zoning, or other permits
pertaining to the operation of the Divestiture Assets. Defendants shall
not undertake, directly or indirectly, any challenges to the
environmental, zoning, or other permits relating to the operation of
the Divestiture Assets.
I. Unless the United States otherwise consents in writing, any
divestiture pursuant to Section IV, or by trustee appointed pursuant to
Section V, of this Final Judgment, shall include the entire Divestiture
Assets, and shall be accomplished in such a way as to satisfy the
United States, in its sole discretion, that the Divestiture Assets can
and will be used by the Acquirer or Acquirers as viable, ongoing
businesses engaged in producing and distributing coarse aggregate, that
the Divestiture Assets will remain viable, and that the divestiture of
such assets will remedy the competitive harm alleged in the Complaint.
The sale of the Divestiture Assets may be made to one or more
Acquirers, so long as the Florida Rock Richmond quarry, identified in
Paragraph II(C)(1)(h) above, and the Florida Rock Gilmerton yard,
identified in Paragraph II(C)(1)(i) above, are divested to a single
Acquirer. The divestitures, whether pursuant to Section IV or Section V
of this Final Judgment:
1. Shall be made to an Acquirer or Acquirers that, in the United
States's sole judgment, has the intent and capability (including the
necessary managerial, operational, technical and financial
capability) to compete effectively in the production, distribution,
and sale of coarse aggregate; and
2. Shall be accomplished so as to satisfy the United States, in
its sole discretion, that none of the terms of any agreement between
an Acquirer or Acquirers and defendants gives defendants the ability
to unreasonably raise the Acquirer's costs, to lower the Acquirer's
efficiency, or otherwise to interfere in the ability of the Acquirer
to compete effectively in the production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate.
V. Appointment of Trustee To Effect Divestitures
A. If defendants have not divested the Divestiture Assets within
the time period specified in Paragraph IV(A), defendants shall notify
the United States of that fact in writing. Upon application of the
United States, the Court shall appoint a trustee selected by the United
States and approved by the Court to effect the divestiture of the
Divestiture Assets.
B. After the appointment of a trustee becomes effective, only the
trustee shall have the right to sell the Divestiture Assets. The
trustee shall have the power and authority to accomplish the
divestiture to an Acquirer acceptable to the United States at such
price and on such terms as are then obtainable upon reasonable effort
by the trustee, subject to the provisions of Sections IV, V, and VI of
this Final Judgment, and shall have such other powers as this Court
deems appropriate. Subject to Paragraph V(D) of this Final Judgment,
the trustee may hire at the cost and expense of defendants any
investment bankers, attorneys, or other agents, who shall be solely
accountable to the trustee, reasonably necessary in the trustee's
judgment to assist in the divestiture.
C. Defendants shall not object to a sale by the trustee on any
ground other than the trustee's malfeasance. Any such objection by
defendants must be conveyed in writing to the United States and the
trustee within ten (10) calendar days after the trustee has provided
the notice required under Section VI.
D. The trustee shall serve at the cost and expense of defendants,
on such terms and conditions as the United States approves, and shall
account for all monies derived from the sale of the assets sold by the
trustee and all costs and expenses so incurred. After approval by the
Court of the trustee's accounting, including fees for its services and
those of any professionals and agents retained by the trustee, all
remaining money shall be paid to defendants and the trust shall then be
terminated. The compensation of the trustee and any professionals and
agents retained by the trustee shall be reasonable in light of the
value of the Divestiture Assets and based on a fee arrangement
providing the trustee with an incentive based on the price and terms of
the divestiture and the speed with which it is accomplished, but
timeliness is paramount.
E. Defendants shall use their best efforts to assist the trustee in
accomplishing the required divestiture. The trustee and any
consultants, accountants, attorneys, and other persons retained by the
trustee shall have full and complete access to the personnel, books,
records, and facilities of the business to be divested, and defendants
shall develop financial and other information relevant to such business
as the trustee may reasonably request, subject to reasonable protection
for trade secrets or other confidential research, development, or
commercial information. Defendants shall take no action to interfere
with or to impede the trustee's accomplishment of the divestiture.
F. After its appointment, the trustee shall file monthly reports
with the United States and the Court setting forth the trustee's
efforts to accomplish the divestiture ordered under this Final
Judgment. To the extent such reports contain information that the
trustee deems confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the
public docket of the Court. Such reports shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each person who, during the preceding
month, made an offer to acquire, expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or was contacted or made an
inquiry about acquiring any interest in the Divestiture Assets, and
shall describe in detail each contact with any such person. The trustee
shall maintain full records of all efforts made to divest the
Divestiture Assets.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished the divestitures ordered
under this Final Judgment within six months after its appointment, the
trustee shall promptly file with the Court a report setting forth: (1)
The trustee's efforts to accomplish the required divestiture; (2) the
reasons, in the trustee's judgment, why the required divestiture has
not been accomplished; and (3) the trustee's recommendations. To the
extent such report contains information that the trustee deems
confidential, such report shall not be filed in the public docket of
the Court. The trustee shall at the same time furnish such report to
the United States, which shall have the right to make additional
recommendations consistent with the purpose of the trust. The Court
thereafter shall enter such orders as it shall deem appropriate to
carry out the purpose of the Final Judgment, which may, if necessary,
include extending the trust and the term of the trustee's appointment
by a period requested by the United States.
VI. Notice of Proposed Divestitures
A. Within two (2) business days following execution of a definitive
divestiture agreement, defendants or the trustee, whichever is then
responsible for effecting the divestiture required herein, shall notify
the United States of any proposed divestiture required by Section IV or
V of this Final Judgment. If the trustee is responsible, it shall
similarly notify defendants. The notice shall set forth the details of
the
[[Page 68187]]
proposed divestiture and list the name, address, and telephone number
of each person not previously identified who offered or expressed an
interest in or desire to acquire any ownership interest in the
Divestiture Assets, together with full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of receipt by the United
States of such notice, the United States may request from defendant,
the proposed Acquirer or Acquirers, any other third party, or the
trustee, if applicable, additional information concerning the proposed
divestiture, the proposed Acquirer or Acquirers, and any other
potential Acquirer. Defendants and the trustee shall furnish any
additional information requested within fifteen (15) calendar days of
the receipt of the request, unless the parties shall otherwise agree.
C. Within thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of the notice, or
within twenty (20) calendar days after the United States has been
provided the additional information requested from defendant, the
proposed Acquirer or Acquirers, any third party, or the trustee,
whichever is later, the United States shall provide written notice to
defendants and the trustee, if there is one, stating whether or not it
objects to the proposed divestiture. If the United States provides
written notice that it does not object, the divestiture may be
consummated, subject only to defendant's limited right to object to the
sale under Paragraph V(C) of this Final Judgment. Absent written notice
that the United States does not object to the proposed Acquirer or upon
objection by the United States, a divestiture proposed under Section IV
or Section V shall not be consummated. Upon objection by defendants
under Paragraph V(C), a divestiture proposed under Section V shall not
be consummated unless approved by the Court.
VII. Financing
Defendants shall not finance all or any part of any purchase made
pursuant to Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
VIII. Hold Separate
Until the divestitures required by this Final Judgment have been
accomplished, defendants shall take all steps necessary to comply with
the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order entered by this Court.
Defendants shall take no action that would jeopardize the divestiture
ordered by this Court.
IX. Affidavits
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint
in this matter, and every thirty (30) calendar days thereafter until
the divestitures have been completed under Section IV or V, defendants
shall deliver to the United States an affidavit as to the fact and
manner of their compliance with Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
Each such affidavit shall include the name, address, and telephone
number of each person who, during the preceding thirty (30) calendar
days, made an offer to acquire, expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or was contacted or made an
inquiry about acquiring, any interest in the Divestiture Assets, and
shall describe in detail each contact with any such person during that
period. Each such affidavit shall also include a description of the
efforts defendants have taken to solicit buyers for the Divestiture
Assets, and to provide required information to any prospective
Acquirer, including the limitations, if any, on such information.
Assuming the information set forth in the affidavit is true and
complete, any objection by the United States to information provided by
defendants, including limitations on the information, shall be made
within fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of such affidavit.
B. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint
in this matter, defendants shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit that describes in reasonable detail all actions defendants
have taken and all steps defendants have implemented on an ongoing
basis to comply with Section VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendants
shall deliver to the United States an affidavit describing any changes
to the efforts and actions outlined in defendants' earlier affidavits
filed pursuant to this section within fifteen (15) calendar days after
the change is implemented.
C. Defendants shall keep all records of all efforts made to
preserve and divest the Divestiture Assets until one year after such
divestitures have been completed.
X. Compliance Inspection
A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
Final Judgment, or of determining whether the Final Judgment should be
modified or vacated, and subject to any legally recognized privilege,
from time to time authorized representatives of the United States
Department of Justice, including consultants and other persons retained
by the United States, shall, upon written request of an authorized
representative of the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the
Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice to defendants, be
permitted:
1. Access during defendants' office hours to inspect and copy,
or at the option of the United States, to require defendants to
provide hard or electronic copies of, all books, ledgers, accounts,
records, data and documents in the possession, custody, or control
of defendants, relating to any matters contained in this Final
Judgment; and
2. To interview, either informally or on the record, defendants'
officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual
counsel present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be
subject to the reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without
restraint or interference by defendant.
B. Upon the written request of an authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division,
defendants shall submit written reports or responses to written
interrogatories, under oath if requested, relating to any of the
matters contained in this Final Judgment as may be requested.
C. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
this section shall be divulged by the United States to any person other
than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the United
States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the United
States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or as
otherwise required by law.
D. If, at the time information or documents are furnished by
defendants to the United States, defendants represent and identify in
writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(7) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, and defendants mark each pertinent page of
such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule 26(c)(7) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United States shall
give defendants ten (10) calendar days notice prior to divulging such
material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand jury proceeding).
XI. No Reacquisition
Defendants may not reacquire any part of the Divestiture Assets
during the term of this Final Judgment.
XII. Retention of Jurisdiction
This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
[[Page 68188]]
compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
XIII. Expiration of Final Judgment
Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
expire ten years from the date of its entry.
XIV. Public Interest Determination
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16, including making copies available to the
public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement, and
any comments thereon and the United States's responses to comments.
Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive
Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with
the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
Date:------------------------------------------------------------------
Court approval subject to procedures of the Antitrust Procedures
and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16.
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United States District Judge
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
United States of America, Plaintiff, v. Vulcan Materials Company
and Florida Rock Industries, Inc., Defendants.
Case: 1:07-cv-02044
Assigned To: Sullivan, Emmet G.
Assign. Date: 11/13/2007
Description: Antitrust
Deck Type: Antitrust
Date Stamp:
Competitive Impact Statement
Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), pursuant to
Section 2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act (``APPA'' or
``Tunney Act''), 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), files this Competitive Impact
Statement relating to the proposed Final Judgment submitted for entry
in this civil antitrust proceeding.
I. Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
The United States filed a civil antitrust Complaint on November 13,
2007, seeking to enjoin the proposed acquisition by Vulcan Materials
Company (``Vulcan'') of Florida Rock Industries, Inc. (``Florida
Rock''). The Complaint alleges that the likely effect of this
acquisition would be to lessen competition substantially in the
production, distribution, and sale of coarse aggregate in certain areas
of Georgia, Tennessee and Virginia, in violation of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. This loss of competition likely would result
in higher prices for coarse aggregate in the affected areas.
At the same time the Complaint was filed, the United States also
filed a Hold Separate Stipulation and Order and a proposed Final
Judgment, which were designed to eliminate the anticompetitive effects
of the acquisition. Under the proposed Final Judgment, which is
explained more fully below, Vulcan and Florida Rock are required to
divest single coarse aggregate quarries in Chattanooga, Tennessee,
Columbus, Georgia, and Richmond, Virginia; four quarries and one site
that is being developed for use as a quarry in the western and southern
parts of the Atlanta area; and a distribution yard in Chesapeake,
Virginia. Until the divestitures required by the Final Judgment have
been accomplished, the Hold Separate Stipulation and Order requires
Vulcan and Florida Rock to preserve, maintain, and continue to operate
the plants discussed above (hereafter ``Divestiture Assets'') as
independent, ongoing, economically viable competitive businesses held
entirely separate, distinct, and apart from those of defendants' other
operations.
The United States, Vulcan, and Florida Rock have stipulated that
the proposed Final Judgment may be entered after compliance with the
APPA. Entry of the proposed Final Judgment would terminate this action,
except that the Court would retain jurisdiction to construe, modify, or
enforce the provisions of the proposed Final Judgment and to punish
violations thereof.
II. Description of the Events Giving Rise to the Alleged Violation
A. The Defendants and the Proposed Transaction
Vulcan is a New Jersey corporation with its principal place of
business in Birmingham, Alabama. It is the nation's largest producer of
construction aggregates, and is also a major provider of other
construction materials and related services. In 2006, Vulcan shipped
approximately 255 million tons of construction aggregates--the majority
of which were coarse aggregate--to customers in 21 states, the District
of Columbia, and Mexico. Its 2006 sales were over $3 billion.
Florida Rock is a Florida corporation with its principal place of
business in Jacksonville, Florida. It produces, distributes, and sells,
among other products, construction aggregates, ready mix concrete,
prestressed concrete, and cement. Its sales are concentrated in the
southeastern and mid-Atlantic states. In 2006, Florida Rock shipped
approximately 45 million tons of construction aggregates, a majority of
which were coarse aggregate, and reported total sales of approximately
$1.4 billion.
On February 19, 2007, Vulcan and Florida Rock entered into an
agreement for Vulcan to acquire Florida Rock in a cash-and-stock
transaction valued at approximately $4.6 billion.
B. The Competitive Effects of the Transaction on the Market for Coarse
Aggregate.
1. Relevant Product Market
The Complaint alleges that the production, distribution, and sale
of coarse aggregate is a relevant product market within the meaning of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act. Coarse aggregate is a type of
construction aggregate, and includes crushed stone of varying sizes
produced at quarries or mines.\1\ Among other things, it is used as
base material for roads and other construction sites and for the
production of ready mix concrete and asphalt. Different sizes of coarse
aggregate are needed to meet different project specifications.
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\1\ Construction aggregates include crushed stone, grave, sand,
recycled asphalt, and recycled concrete.
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There are no reliable substitutes for coarse aggregate because it
differs from other products in its physical composition, functional
characteristics, customary uses, consistent availability, and pricing.
To the extent that any substitutes exist, most customers already use
these to the full extent possible in light of the limits on their
availability and the amounts that can be used in a given product, and
cannot use more of them in place of coarse aggregate in response to an
increase in the price of coarse aggregate. The Complaint alleges that a
small but significant post-acquisition increase in the price of coarse
aggregate would not cause its purchasers to substitute another product
in sufficient quantities so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable. Accordingly, the production, distribution, and sale of
coarse aggregate is a relevant product market.
2. Relevant Geographic Markets
Coarse aggregate is a bulky, heavy, and relatively low-value
product. In some markets, coarse aggregate is delivered to customers
exclusively by truck. In other markets, the lack of native coarse
aggregate sources and the availability