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						Store News: Texaco-Shell Case Headed to Supreme Court: "...an 
						appeals court ruling that said a Texaco-Shell joint 
						venture was guilty of price fixing": Tuesday 4 October 
						2005 
 
  WASHINGTON -- As the Supreme Court opens up its new 
						session, two major oil companies will be heading to 
						Washington. The Supreme Court will hear the antitrust 
						case, Texaco and Shell Oil v. Dagher, in which 
						the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice's 
						antitrust division are asking the high court to overturn 
						an appeals court ruling that said a Texaco-Shell joint 
						venture was guilty of price fixing, according to 
						CNN/Money . 
 A federal district court in California originally threw 
						out the case against the oil companies, saying that the 
						venture, called Equilon, is one entity allowed to charge 
						one price, according to CNN/Money . But the 
						ruling was overturned by the 9th Circuit Court of 
						Appeals in San Francisco in June 2004. Texaco and Shell, 
						two of the nation's biggest oil companies, appealed to 
						the Supreme Court.
 
 CNN/Money reported that the high court must 
						decide if a joint venture can set prices as one 
						corporate entity or if the two companies, Texaco and 
						Shell, which each market gasoline products through the 
						joint venture, must offer their gas station owners 
						different prices to create a more competitive market.
 
 Jeffrey Lamken at the law firm Baker Botts told 
						CNN/Money that if the Supreme Court were to maintain 
						the appellate court's ruling, it would change the 
						fundamental nature of joint ventures.
 
 "These two companies have a joint venture for processing 
						and distribution of refined petroleum and while they 
						agreed not to compete with each other, they still 
						compete with other companies," he said in the 
						CNN/Money report.
 
 If the high court decides that even within a joint 
						venture, two companies would have to set competing 
						prices, the joint venture system would probably 
						collapse, resulting in a rash of mergers and spin-offs,
						CNN/Money reported.
 
 
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