No. 92-8049.United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit.
May 17, 1993.
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William E. Sumner, David A. Webster, Sumner Hewes, Atlanta, GA, for plaintiff-appellant, cross-appellee.
Paul Webb, Jr., Philip S. Coe, Webb Daniel, Atlanta, GA, for defendants-appellees, cross-appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
Before KRAVITCH, Circuit Judge, GODBOLD and OAKES[*] , Senior Circuit Judges.
OAKES, Senior Circuit Judge:
[1] The critical question presented by this case involves a conspiracy between a manufacturer and a favored distributor. The object of the conspiracy was to raise wholesale prices to other distributors, including the plaintiff, on products to be sold to one large customer. It is of some significance that the wholesale price, as raised, was higher than prevailing retail prices. The antitrust law question is whether this conspiracy was a device to force an increase in the resale price, or a vertical agreement to fix the minimum resale price in violation of § 1 of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 (1988) (the “Act”). Resale price maintenance agreements are, of course, per se illegal restraints of trade within § 1 of the Act. Absent such per sePage 1190
requires consideration of the ancient but venerable doctrine of “the law of the case.” In addition, the case raises questions of sufficiency of proof, injury in fact, and conspiracy. Problems of interlocutory review are not involved, however, since this court granted petitions for review of all of the issues following district court certification, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (1988).
[4] I. BACKGROUND[5] A. Facts:
[6] While the background facts were well set forth in DeLong II,
in the interests of easier understanding, we will recount them here. The plaintiff distributor is DeLong Equipment Company (“DeLong”), a Georgia corporation wholly owned by Harold DeLong. DeLong distributes equipment and supplies used to polish and deburr metal parts in industrial manufacturing processes. The critical product in this process, called “media,” consists of abrasive materials which are placed in vibratory machinery with the metal parts to be polished and deburred. Media can consist of natural products, such as sand without the backing paper used in sandpaper. The media involved in this case, however, known as “preformed ceramic media,” is made from a blend of clays, sands and polishing agents, extruded through metal molds and cut into different shapes, such as cylinders, stars, rectangles or triangles, after which it is baked and dried. The media is packed by the manufacturer and shipped either to distributors such as DeLong or directly to customers. Distributors, as pointed out i DeLong II, not only provide regular and prompt delivery of media and related supplies, but also consult with the end user, helping it select the appropriate equipment, media, power, speed and time to bring the user’s product to the correct state of polish.
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bids for any given products necessary; these specifications appear on Pratt product material control dockets (“PMCs”). With exceptions not relevant here, the Pratt purchasing department may only purchase pre-approved items specified on the PMCs from pre-approved dealers and the materials delivered must have the PMC numbers stamped on the box. The media at issue here, manufactured by Washington Mills for Pratt and known as “special,” were approved by Pratt after testing and designated on the appropriate PMCs as “P W 5,000” (PMC 3175), “P W 6,000” (PMC 3178) and “P W 7,000” (PMC 3179). The testing and approval of the Washington Mills products was done by Pratt engineers in East Hartford, Connecticut, in consultation with William and Robert Biebel of BCS. James Neal, a Pratt engineer and a friend of the Biebels, obtained the issuance of the PMCs for the “special” Washington Mills media furnished by BCS. BCS was designated in the Pratt PMC as “manufacturer” and the product was labeled accordingly both by BCS itself and by Washington Mills on empty boxes for the products to be supplied to Pratt.
[10] There was ample proof at trial to support the allegations in DeLong’s complaint that the “special” media involved in this case was actually generic, that is, media that Washington Mills regularly produced and carried in stock, and that this “special” media, sold to the specific customer around whom this case revolves, did not differ in composition from the generic media stocked by Washington Mills. Thus, the evidence is essentially conclusive that it cost Washington Mills no more to produce the “special” media involved in this case than it did to produce its regular line set forth in its standard price list. Pratt, in other words, was duped. [11] At the time Pratt issued its PMC for the purchase of “BCS-manufactured” special media, Washington Mills was selling the very same media generically to BCS for .495 dollars per pound. This price was based on Washington Mills’s standard distributors’ discount of 25% off its retail price of .66 dollars per pound. BCS’s resale price to Pratt on its initial sales from February through October 5, 1983, however, was .97 dollars per pound, giving BCS a profit of .475, or 96%. Meanwhile, Pratt was both designing a new jet engine and planning on building a new production facility; as of the spring of 1983 it did build such a facility in Columbus, Georgia, not far from DeLong’s place of business. Harold DeLong became aware of Pratt’s plans and decided to pursue the account as an approved vendor. He began by asking the Washington Mills sales representative, Peter Ford, what type of media was being provided to the Pratt East Hartford plant, but was told only that BCS was “handling” the Pratt account. Harold DeLong was not able to learn from Ford what specific products Pratt required. [12] Nevertheless, DeLong solicited business from Pratt as early as June, 1983. Evidently when word of this got back to Connecticut, the Washington Mills sales representative, Ford, asked Harold DeLong to meet in Atlanta with Robert Biebel of BCS in August, 1983. Biebel indicated to Harold DeLong that he was willing to work with DeLong in a joint venture and that there was “plenty of money in it” for both DeLong and BCS. Harold DeLong declined the offer, reasoning that he did not need BCS’s help. After the Atlanta meeting and perhaps after Harold DeLong expressed his suspicions that the Pratt “special” media was really generic, stock Washington Mills media, BCS and Washington Mills agreed on the price-fixing scheme brought into question here. The scheme was that Washington Mills would raise the wholesale price paid by BCS for media to be resold to Pratt from .495 dollars to .85 dollars per pound, but Washington Mills would pay back to BCS the difference. This was to be and was in fact done by sending disguised payments through Wood Thompson, a foreign corporation in Nassau, the Bahamas, created by BCS shortly after BCS learned that Pratt was locating its new jet engine facility in Georgia. The payback checks and internal vouchers did not identify BCS and were issued for fictitious invoices made payable to WoodPage 1192
Thompson and mailed directly to the Bahamas. The evidence was that the offshore company was established in order to keep such payments “private,” and Washington Mills did not report them to the I.R.S. on a Form 1099. Not surprisingly, perhaps, the payback checks are called “kickbacks” by DeLong and “commissions” by Washington Mills.
[13] At an August, 1983 meeting at Pratt’s East Hartford, Connecticut plant between representatives of Washington Mills and Pratt, the Washington Mills personnel present gave Pratt the Washington Mills designation of “P W special 5,000” in connection with the Pratt PMC 3175 and “P W special 6,000 and 7,000” to correspond to the two Pratt PMCs, 3178 and 3179. As previously indicated, the “P W special 5,000” was a stock item available at .495 per pound to all Washington Mills distributors, and the “P W special 6,000 and 7,000” also were identical to media listed in the stock price list at .495 per pound for distributors (at the 25% discount from the retail list price of .66 per pound). On September 1, 1983, the day after BCS filled a purchase order for 10,000 pounds of PMC 3175 destined for the Columbus facility, various Pratt representatives visited DeLong to survey DeLong in response to its previous request for formal supplier qualification. In that meeting, they provided DeLong with a list of the products that Pratt needed, setting forth BCS computer code numbers. DeLong understood from this meeting that it was qualified as a Pratt vendor. On October 6, 1983, Pratt issued a blanket purchase order number 4929748 for 86,400 pounds of PMC 3175 for use at the Columbus plant. DeLong could not bid on this order because Washington Mills had not as yet supplied it with the product identification for Pratt media, with the result that BCS made the sale. Between October 7, 1983 and October 17, 1984 BCS was to fill this entire order at .91 dollars per pound, although at first the order was fulfilled from earlier purchases of media and before the kickback arrangement went into effect. [14] By letter of November 4, 1983, Washington Mills finally provided DeLong with Pratt media designations, but informed DeLong that the wholesale price to DeLong would be .85 dollars per pound. As stated, until that time Washington Mills had charged BCS only .495 dollars per pound for identical media. DeLong immediately called and questioned the “special” designation and the 85-cent price, stating that the media samples appeared to be standard Washington Mills stock media which could be ordered at .495 dollars per pound from the price list. When the Washington Mills representative insisted that the media were special, DeLong replied that “everyone had better be paying the same price for the `specials’.” Indeed, on January 18, 1984, in BCS’s first purchase of PMC 3175 thereafter, BCS was charged 85 cents per pound for 12,500 lb. of a Pratt special. Pursuant to the payback agreement, however, Washington Mills paid .355 dollars per pound to BCS through Wood Thompson, making the BCS price for the special media exactly .495 dollars per pound, the very same price that BCS had paid for the media prior to the Washington Mills November 4, 1983 letter to DeLong. Both Robert Biebel of BCS and the treasurer of Washington Mills testified that the payments to Wood Thompson were calculated to maintain BCS’s pre-November, 1983 price. [15] In the spring of 1984, the Washington Mills representative with whom DeLong had dealt left the company and two new salesmen, Robert Baldauf and Hans Van der Sande, began dealing with DeLong. According to them, DeLong raised the issue of “special designation of Pratt media every time he had the opportunity.” DeLong also conducted independent laboratory tests, concluding that the media were identical. Nevertheless, Washington Mills continued to charge DeLong the .85 price and, while DeLong sold some small amounts to the Pratt plant at Columbus, Pratt’s requirements for this plant were satisfied largely by deliveries from BCS under the prior October, 1983 order. There was no reason for Pratt to stop ordering media from BCS, though it could have canceled that order under its terms, since it was receiving the product at a price of 91Page 1193
cents a pound, which DeLong could not meet, given its cost from Washington Mills of 85 cents a pound F.O.B. Lake Wales, Florida. Consequently, DeLong sold a total of only 6,150 pounds of media to Pratt during 1984.
[16] Van de Sande testified that after the last deliveries were made by BCS under the October, 1983 order, Biebel, Van der Sande and Baldauf visited Pratt in Columbus, Georgia (almost simultaneously visiting DeLong in Atlanta), to lay the groundwork for using Washington Mills trucks and Lake Wales warehousing to deliver media directly to Pratt at the rate of 750,000 to 1 million pounds per year. According to Biebel, BCS felt secure for three years, since that was the time it ordinarily took Pratt to get a material approved, “unless DeLong d[id] not play the game.” According to Van der Sande, this meant that DeLong might “upset the apple cart.” As a result of this visit, Pratt’s orders were placed directly with Washington Mills as of November 12, 1984, with special retail prices charged for what was actually generic media, and on these direct sales BCS continued to receive kickbacks, though in varying amounts. DeLong, smarting, perhaps, continued to raise concerns regarding the “special” designation and inflated price. Washington Mills terminated DeLong as a distributor in August, 1985, and while it introduced evidence to the effect that the termination was because DeLong had made incorrect payments and DeLong personnel had been abusive, the jury found these claims to be pretextual. [17] B. Procedural History:Page 1194
notwithstanding the verdict on all counts,[2] and denying the motion for a new trial as to liability on the antitrust claims and liability and damages on the common-law fraud count. The district court, however, granted a new trial as to the measure of damages under both the Sherman Act and Robinson-Patman Act counts, and denied DeLong’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict as to the interest awarded on Washington Mills’ counterclaim. The trial court granted cross motions to certify for interlocutory review pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) on November 20, 1991, and this court granted cross petitions for such review.
[19] C. Standard of Review:[22] II. DISCUSSION
[23] We will discuss the issues in the case much as the parties have in their briefs, viz: by separating the issues appealed by Washington Mills resulting from the denial of its motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and the issues on the cross-appeal by DeLong resulting from the grant of the Washington Mills motions for a new trial in respect to damages, on both the Sherman Act and the Robinson-Patman Act counts.
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representative for Washington Mills, and Van der Sande, Washington Mills’ former national sales manager, both left Washington Mills to form a competing manufacturer, Ceratech. Baldauf and Van der Sande testified that they had not known of any effort to fix prices of media or acted in furtherance of a conspiracy to fix those prices. Robert Biebel testified that he had nothing to do with the 85 cents per pound charged BCS or DeLong for the Pratt “special” media by Washington Mills, or had any agreement with anybody at Washington Mills as to the price at which BCS would sell media, whether before or after DeLong was terminated, or the price at which Washington Mills would sell media to DeLong, or with anyone as to termination of DeLong as a distributor. Washington Mills contends that against this “direct and positive evidence” DeLong offered only a string of inferences that an agreement on price could have been reached, and that this evidence is “so highly ambiguous” as not to support a finding of conspiracy according to the terms of Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp., 465 U.S. 752, 763, 104 S.Ct. 1464, 1470, 79 L.Ed.2d 775 (1984) and Riverview Invs., Inc. v. Ottawa Community Improvement Corp., 899 F.2d 474 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 855, 111 S.Ct. 151, 112 L.Ed.2d 117 (1990). We agree with DeLong, however, that there was substantial evidence to support the finding of conspiracy. There was evidence that the so-called “special” media for Pratt was identical to stock media, and that the increased price charged by Washington Mills for the product to Pratt was not justified by any cost differential. Indeed, two of the “special” media, known as P W 6,000 and P
W 7,000, were clearly identified as stock media on Washington Mills’ price list. As for P W 5,000, while it was not listed on a stock price list, it was available at all relevant times at the stock price on orders for more than 10,000 Ibs. or at the stock price plus a nominal charge for producing a die on smaller orders; as to it, the actual added cost was minimal, and it was composed of the same materials as the other generic media. Moreover, Washington Mills sold all three types of “Pratt” media to other customers as well as to BCS, at the stock price.
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Mills agreeing to pay kickbacks to BCS even on the direct sales. Indeed, Van der Sande’s report of that meeting stated that Robert Biebel had said he had several good friends at Pratt who from time to time took trips on his boat to the Bahamas, which friendships gave him an edge on the competition. Van der Sande thought that Pratt would likely become Washington Mills’ largest media customer, buying $750,000-$1,000,000 worth of media per year. Van der Sande reported to Washington that “Bob Biebel feels we are secure for at least three years unless DeLong does not play the game.” Van der Sande did not mention his meeting with the Pratt people in Georgia the day before he visited DeLong, but he did say that DeLong was “not very happy” with BCS and Pratt.
[29] Perhaps the critical fact in terms of a conspiracy is that Washington Mills rebated to BCS the total difference, right to the half penny, between its new 85 cent price and the 49.5 cent stock price. This totally destroyed any argument that increased costs justified a higher price. If it was supposed to reflect some greater care or concern on the part of BCS toward Pratt, then DeLong should have been allowed to accept the same degree of responsibility at the same price. Instead, Delong, when it continued to complain about the pricing and the use of stock media under “special” labels to Pratt, was terminated on what the jury found were the pretextual reasons of being behind in payments to Washington Mills and abusive to Washington Mills personnel, allegations that were identified by the Court of Appeals in DeLong II as “[g]enuine issues of material fact. . . .” 887 F.2d at 1513. [30] The long and the short of it is that the jury could properly conclude that Washington Mills and BCS conspired to fix the price of Washington Mills media both to DeLong and to Pratt under the fraudulent cover that the generic media was “special,” and by the fraudulent means of kickbacks by way of “commissions” to BCS’s offshore shell corporation. [31] B. Legal Arguments on the Sherman Antitrust Act Claims:Page 1197
Supreme Court has said, the “[l]aw of the case directs a court’s discretion, it does not limit the tribunal’s power.” Arizona v. California, 460 U.S. 605, 618, 103 S.Ct. 1382, 1391, 75 L.Ed.2d 318 (1983). See also 18 Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller and Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4478 at 790 (1981).
[34] Under the law of the case doctrine, DeLong II basically decided the Sherman Act liability claims against Washington Mills on the matters of law argued here, and there has been no intervening change in the law since DeLong II was decided. See DeLong II, 887 F.2d 1499. The DeLong II court addressed these issues in the context of a grant of summary judgment to the defendants on the theory that the conspiracy alleged and the evidence adduced to establish it did not describe a vertical restraint on trade. The DeLong II court held that the alleged conspiracy to restrain competition here was “to fix prices of media sold to Pratt by designating ordinary media as `special’ media and selling it at an artificially inflated price to Pratt.”887 F.2d at 1505. The DeLong II court ruled that such a conspiracy, if proven, was a vertical restraint within the meaning of Business Electronics Corp., 485 U.S. at 730 n. 4, 108 S.Ct. at 1522 n. 4, DeLong II, 887 F.2d at 1505-06, and furthermore that it was a vertical restraint that “include[d] some agreement on price or price levels.” Id. at 1506 (quotin Business Elecs, 485 U.S. at 736, 108 S.Ct. at 1525). After pointing out that this case involves termination of DeLong as a distributor of Washington Mills “in furtherance of” the vertical price restraint conspiracy, DeLong II, 887 F.2d at 1505, the court in DeLong II, citing Monsanto v. Spray-Rite Service Corp., 465 U.S. at 760-61, 104 S.Ct. at 1469, distinctly held that the restraints alleged there and proven on remand were not “nonprice in nature” as the district court had held, 887 F.2d at 1506-07, but, rather, constituted “a vertical pricePage 1198
certitude reexamine on the merits the points of law raised.
[37] 1. Injury in Fact.Page 1199
competition and maintaining an inflated price, but in obtaining the stock price at which he could make a profit that was usual in the business with the basic markup. In short, nothing in this case indicates that DeLong sought to benefit from the Washington Mills-BCS anti-competitive conduct or to obtain super-competitive prices. DeLong’s contentions properly gave it standing on the basis that Washington Mills, at BCS’s instigation and with BCS’s assistance, unfairly took advantage of its short-term position as the only approved source of media by artificially inflating the wholesale price and thereby extracting super-competitive profits which it shared with BCS by payment of “commissions” or “kickbacks”; that it blocked competition among distributors of its generic media in the market for one of its largest end-customers; and that it terminated DeLong as a Washington Mills distributor when DeLong threatened not to “play the game.” Thus, DeLong has sustained antitrust injury by loss of its Washington Mills distributorship and consequent loss of sales and profits. Because Washington Mills media had certain competitive advantages over alternative media, DeLong has not suffered damage simply from its own failure to compete in an open market with identical media made by other manufacturers. DeLong was not allowed to participate in the competitive market for Washington Mills media because it refused to go along with the Washington Mills/BCS price-fixing scheme.
[42] But Washington Mills goes a step farther in arguing that DeLong’s claimed injury boils down to the contention that, absent Washington Mills overcharging, Pratt would simply have continued to purchase Washington Mills products, without examining alternative sources of supply. On this basis, it is argued that DeLong’s injury results from increased competition, which is by definition not an antitrust injury. Washington Mills and BCS, however, had seen “a window of opportunity,” according to the testimony of Washington Mills President and controlling shareholder John Williams, during which they could charge non-market prices without regard to competition. Given BCS’s approval and Pratt’s purchasing practices, the conspirators had the power to exclude competition and maintain high prices over a longer haul — Biebel was quoted as saying “we are secure for at least three years unless DeLong does not play the game” — so long as DeLong cooperated. True, Pratt has switched to another brand of media, and a witness for DeLong suggested that DeLong could have won that contract had it bid competitively. But DeLong was at a disadvantage in bidding for the Pratt business since it could not offer Washington Mills media. The jury could have decided that DeLong lost the share of the competitive market which it would have had if it had it been able to offer Washington Mills media in the future. No quarrel is had by Washington Mills with the court’s repeated instructions to the jury that only losses of business which would have been retained in a competitive market were actionable. [43] 2. Failure to show a conspiracy over resale prices.Page 1200
dealer.” Id., 485 U.S. at 726, 108 S.Ct. at 1521 (emphasis added). While there was no requirement of adding a “fixed pad” to the price to Pratt, there is no question but what Washington Mills and BCS voluntarily agreed to pad the Pratt price. It will be recalled that Biebel of BCS suggested that BCS and DeLong handle the Georgia Pratt business together, assuring DeLong that there was “plenty of money in it for both of us.” When DeLong refused to “play the game,” Washington Mills raised the price to DeLong to 85 cents and schemed with BCS so as facially to raise the BCS price to the same amount, while surreptitiously rebating the difference between the 85 cents and the 49.5 cent list price for the same stock media. By fixing the wholesale price level at 85 cents, DeLong or any other distributor would have been required to sell to Pratt at the wholesale price plus expenses and market profits, so that what would result would be the equivalent of resale price maintenance. Price-fixing at the wholesale level, as testified to by a DeLong expert economist, was the mechanism by which the retail price was maintained. The agreement in this case, then, was that future sales by anyone — Washington Mills, BCS, or a duped distributor such as DeLong — would be at the premium price.
[46] In general, of course, the fixing of wholesale prices poses no antitrust problem. See 8 Phillip P. Areeda, Antitrust Law ¶ 1627 at 316 (1988) (“otherwise, every wholesale price would be illegal — an obviously senseless result”). However, as Areeda notes, complex wholesale price formulae may be the means by which resale price fixing is accomplished, where the formula “so var[ies] the wholesale price in accord with each dealer’s resale price as to be the full or substantial functional equivalent of resale price-fixing agreements.” Id. at 317. See also id. ¶ 1627d at 319, et seq. As an example of such a functional equivalent retail price fix, Areeda cites Newberry v. Washington Post Co., 438 F. Supp. 470 (D.D.C. 1977), in which a manufacturer raised the wholesale price to a particular dealer by the amount by which the actual retail price exceeded the manufacturer’s suggested resale price, thus effectively preventing the dealer from charging more; there, it was significant that the increase was applicable only to one dealer. Id. ¶ 1627 at 320-21. Here, to be sure, the wholesale price was not set in response to a dealer’s price reduction or increase, but, rather, so as to retain the sweetheart arrangement between the manufacturer and the favored dealer BCS; when DeLong would not comply with the scheme, his dealership was terminated, and, as we read Areeda, he would find this “a vertical price-fixing agreement.” Id. ¶ 1627 at 321. [47] To be sure, Areeda recently criticized DeLong II as having “adopted an unduly broad concept of what constitutes resale price maintenance.” Areeda and Hovenkamp ¶ 1622′ at 1049 (Supp. 1991). The supplement’s analysis of the DeLong II case in this respect is not up to that well-known treatise’s customary high standards, however. It refers to the fact that the plaintiff was “allegedly terminated because it frequently called the attention of customers [sic] and others to this fraudulent scheme,” a misstatement of fact. The analysis suggests that the defendant (Washington Mills) might be guilty “merely of successful product differentiation,” a far cry from the facts of this case where there was considerable evidence of fraud; or of Robinson-Patman violations “(if the high-priced customer competes with low-price customers),” id., surely not the case here. The supplement then says “[b]ut the supposition of the supplier and the actual charge of higher prices for supposedly premium products do not constitute an agreement setting a resale price. . . .” Id. We do not know to which “supposition” the quotation refers, nor do we know how this squares with the analysis in the main volume of wholesale price schemes which operate as the functional equivalent of resale price-fixing. Certainly an agreement is required to present antitrust problems, but here we have one: an agreement between Washington Mills and BCS to inflate all distributors’ end price of products destined for one large customer by eliminating price competition at the dealer level. The Areeda supplementPage 1201
describes the supplier and distributor’s agreement to divide the excess profits from their fraud-tainted sales as an agreement with “some” of the attributes of a resale price maintenance agreement, but treats the BCS-Washington Mills deal as “no more than the distributor’s reward for participating in the fraudulent scheme.” Id. It was not only a reward, however, but an integral part of the very scheme to inflate prices charged by both dealers, and thus a boon for eliminating distributor competition. While it may generally be true, as Areeda argues both in the supplement and in the main volumes, that the supplier would be better off if the distributor charged less than the agreed-on price, because then it would make even more fraudulent sales, the fact is that in this case the supplier’s temporary monopoly position, achieved by fraud and by Pratt’s careful approval practices for choosing media, allowed it to reap the benefits as well. This may have been short-sighted, in light of the fact that Pratt now uses another brand of media, but nonetheless Washington Mills evidently chose to combine with one of its dealers to eliminate price competition in the market for media sales to Pratt. We believe that the Areeda supplement analysis overlooks the functional equivalence argument made in the main volume and, as such, does not carry the day with us.
[48] 3. Argument that failure of proof of Sherman Act damages mandated a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, not merely a new trial on damages.Page 1202
under DeLong II, 887 F.2d at 1516-17. The only argument seriously advanced here — and to state it makes it appear to border on the ridiculous — is that DeLong and BCS were not in functional or geographic competition with one another, see, e.g., Parrish v. Cox, 586 F.2d 9, 11 (6th Cir. 1978) (competition must be in same geographical market); M.C. Manufacturing Co., Inc. v. Texas Foundries, Inc., 517 F.2d 1059, 1068 n. 20 (5th Cir. 1975), cert. denied, 424 U.S. 968, 96 S.Ct. 1466, 47 L.Ed.2d 736 (1976). However, there is no doubt but that both BCS and DeLong were after the same Pratt dollar and, while BCS was primarily a New England distributor and DeLong a southeastern one, both were obviously in head-to-head competition for the Pratt Columbus, Georgia expenditures for jet propeller polishing media, and at corresponding or overlapping time periods. Both were competitors during the startup period for Pratt’s Columbus plant beginning in 1983. Deliveries to BCS for fulfilling the Pratt Georgia orders were initially made to a warehouse in Manchester, Connecticut and transported to Columbus periodically for a year’s period during which DeLong, which had begun soliciting business in June of 1983 from Pratt, made only minimal sales to Pratt’s relatively nearby new plant. BCS sales to Pratt thus directly competed with potential sales by DeLong. Cf. Hartley Parker, Inc. v. Florida Beverage Corp., 307 F.2d 916, 921 (5th Cir. 1962) (competition could be established if plaintiff showed “that it had a substantial stock on hand . . . and that in selling that stock it was in present and active competition with [the defendant].”). Moreover, at least by September 1, 1983, DeLong had been approved as a vendor by Pratt and the subsequent releases of sales under the earlier October contract made by BCS were thus directly competitive with any DeLong sales. True, BCS had no local Georgia warehouse to meet Pratt’s 24-hour delivery requirements, but by virtue of its sweetheart price arrangements with Washington Mills it was enabled both to foreclose DeLong from competing in Georgia for a year and to weaken DeLong’s longterm position. While there must be two sales made by the same seller to at least two different purchasers at two different prices, Pierce v. Commercial Warehouse, Div. of Thompson Automotive Warehouse, Inc., 876 F.2d 86, 87 (11th Cir. 1989)cert. denied, 493 U.S. 1045, 110 S.Ct. 841, 107 L.Ed.2d 836
(1990), there is no requirement that the two sales be made at precisely the same time or place. It is sufficient if the complaining party demonstrates some sort of real competitive injury. Chrysler Credit Corp. v. J. Truett Payne Co., 670 F.2d at 581-82; M.C. Mfg. Co., 517 F.2d at 1065-68. Washington Mills’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the Robinson-Patman Act claim was properly denied.
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the law of the case is therefore a complete answer to this argument, the fact is that in reversing the district court’s prior dismissal of this claim for lack of justifiable reliance, the DeLong II court specifically pointed out that where a plaintiff repeatedly confronts a defendant with the apparent falsity of its representations, and the defendant repeatedly confirms its original statement, asserting special knowledge, reliance is justified. See Georgia-Carolina Brick Tile Co. v. Brown, 153 Ga. App. 747, 755, 266 S.E.2d 531, 539
(1980). Washington Mills argues that at trial Harold DeLong did not testify that he was deceived by the special label or that he relied on Washington Mills’ alleged “superior knowledge,” but, rather, said that he never believed Washington Mills “from day one.” But DeLong’s inward lack of belief in Washington Mills’ fraudulent assertions did not demonstrate itself in any external manifestation other than continued questioning, only to be met by continued misrepresentation. We see no need for any further showing of reliance.
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on the computation of factors for inflation and discount to present value. Dr. Bruce Seaman, an economist and professor at Georgia State University, offered alternative projections of lost profits from 1994 forward to 2019, the life of the Columbus plant, and testified to the assumptions underlying the five damage alternatives he presented. The defendants cross-examined the witnesses as to their assumptions, but offered no expert testimony of their own.
[59] The district court, in setting aside the Sherman Act damages verdict, indicated that it was doing so because the expert projections were based upon the key assumption that “every single pound of Pratt and Whitney’s projected media usage to the year 2019 would be Washington Mills media and that every pound of it would be sold by plaintiff.” DeLong Equip. Co. v. Washington Mills Electro Minerals Corp., No. 1:86-cv-275-RLV, slip op. at 3 (N.D.Ga. Sept. 30, 1991) (order vacating judgment and, inter alia, granting motion for new trial on antitrust damages) (“DeLong Order”). This interpretation of the expert testimony, while apparently suggested by Washington Mills’ post-judgment brief, does not comport with the testimony. Thurman’s testimony that DeLong had suffered a loss of $694,743 in lost sales from 1985 to 1994 started from a base calculation of all sales to the Columbus plant by all manufacturers and distributors, but adjusted profits by assuming a discount of 10% in price, which, as the jury was correctly informed, is the functional and mathematical equivalent of assuming that a significant portion of the Columbus media business would go to other distributors or manufacturers. Thurman’s assumption of a discount of sales price by 10% to only 90% of list, amounts to a loss of a third or more of the profit on each individual sale — the substantial equivalent of losing the same proportion of sales. The evidence supports the Thurman calculations, and we find no error that would justify setting aside that portion of the verdict. To be sure, Thurman also offered one estimate of the damages for the entire projection period, through the year 2019, which utilized the constant assumption of this price reduction, and it was apparently on the basis of this assumption that the trial court was led astray. Thurman’s calculation produced a figure almost identical to one of Dr. Seaman’s five alternative damage scenarios, the one on which the jury settled. However, again, Dr. Seaman presented the jury with five scenarios in which DeLong achieved different degrees of success in the market for the Pratt media business, and the assumptions behind these were based in evidence and subject to cross-examination. [60] The trial court, in its review of the evidence completed more than a year after the verdict, made certain additional factual assumptions that were simply not the case. These include the following: [61] First, Thurman did not assume that all media sold to Pratt would be Washington Mills media, except in a pricing sense, that is to say, in his own words he “identified products from Washington Mills’ price lists” and used the corresponding prices from those lists to arrive at his own list price assumptions. His method of arriving at sales volume did not attribute all sales to Washington Mills. [62] Second, the trial court questioned whether Pratt would continue to buy through middlemen as opposed to going directly to the manufacturer. True, the media purchaser for Pratt, Bud Henry, testified that Pratt had a “goal” of reducing prices by buying directly, but he did not suggest that all sales categorically would be made directly or that Pratt would ignore the advantages of going through distributors where they outweighed the advantages of direct sales. Pratt did and does in fact use distributors, since servicing capacity and timely delivery were and presumably are of value to the company, and at the time of trial Pratt was buying the bulk of its media through another distributor, not directly. There was ample evidence to indicate that special services were provided by distributors. One could just as well suppose that Pratt could make its own media. Henry himself concluded that there was no reason that DeLong could not have continued indefinitely as one of Pratt’s suppliers.Page 1205
[63] Third, as we have noted Dr. Seaman examined the case for the lost future profits for 1994-2019 by addressing five alternative models. Despite Washington Mills’ and the trial court’s claims, he did assume that DeLong was not the only distributor and Washington Mills not the only manufacturer. While he assumed that in the early stages Washington Mills would have had the inside track, he also assumed that DeLong would have “made an adjustment” to be “better positioned to maintain the Pratt accounts.” He thus chose different levels of competition and different responses to that competition to make his projections. His case one, not in issue here, was a mathematical extrapolation of “maximum damages.” This case was based on the assumption that the trial court mistakenly thought all expert testimony rested upon — “that every single pound of Pratt Whitney’s projected media usage to the year 2019 would be Washington Mills media and that every pound of it would be sold by DeLong.” DeLong Order,Page 1206
1981), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1125, 102 S.Ct. 975, 71 L.Ed.2d 113 (1981); and Lehrman v. Gulf Oil Corp., 464 F.2d 26, 46-47 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 409 U.S. 1077, 93 S.Ct. 687, 34 L.Ed.2d 665 (1972). On the strength of the overall evidence, exclusive of the mathematical and economic projections, the jury properly could have concluded that DeLong would have continued to sell to Pratt on the basis of the advantages of the Washington Mills product and DeLong’s superior servicing and delivery capacity. The fact that Washington Mills has in fact lost the Pratt media business to another manufacturer is, at most, an indication that its overcharging and fraud preempted its participation in future sales.
[68] In sum, because the district court’s grant of a new trial, in a 5-page order filed more than a year after the close of trial, was based on a misreading of the evidence, the court abused its discretion in discarding the jury’s verdict. [69] DeLong also appeals the grant of a new trial on the Robinson-Patman Act damages, arguing that the jury’s award of $50,216.15 should be reinstated. This sum, as we have said, is identical to the amount of kickbacks which BCS received for DeLong’s sales of media to Pratt. The district court granted a new trial on these damages because it concluded that the jury had latched onto this figure despite the fact that “Robinson-Patman damages must be measured by what the disfavored buyer suffered, not by what the favored buyer gained.” DeLong Order, slip op. at 4. See also J. Truett Payne, 451 U.S. at 568, 101 S.Ct. at 1930Page 1207
discretion to grant a new trial. E.g., Schneider v. Lockheed Aircraft Corp., 658 F.2d 835, 849 (D.C. Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 455 U.S. 994, 102 S.Ct. 1622, 71 L.Ed.2d 855 (1982) Wood v. Holiday Inns, Inc., 508 F.2d 167, 175 (5th Cir. 1975). While we think it conceivable that the jury viewed the kickbacks as a likely minimum measure of DeLong’s damages as a result of the price discrimination, we think the district court was in a better position to determine whether the verdict in fact was the product of confusion. In addition to the verdict itself, the judge might have considered the possibility that the jury was distracted by the much larger Sherman Act damages claim and confused by the comparative weakness of the instructions he gave for calculating Robinson-Patman damages. The judge admonished the jury generally that recovery on all antitrust claims should be for injury to the plaintiff’s business, but he offered no specific instructions for calculating the Robinson-Patman Act damages. Indeed, the district court’s only explicit statement to the jury on the subject was the following:
[72] In part because of this misstatement, Washington Mills sought a specific jury charge that DeLong could recover only in the amount of its own injury from the price discrimination, and not in the amount of BCS’s gain. The court rejected this suggestion on the theory that the general admonition covered the point. He might have recalled, too, that DeLong’s lawyers had advised the jury during closing argument that DeLong’s injury, and not BCS’s gain, was the appropriate measure of Robinson-Patman damages. Nonetheless, we cannot say that it was error to conclude, once the jury returned a verdict in the precise sum of the paybacks to BCS, that the jury had chosen this figure for impermissible reasons. Accordingly, we affirm the grant of a new trial on the Robinson-Patman damages. [73] Finally, the trial court did not err in allowing pre-judgment interest on Washington Mills’ counterclaim on DeLong’s open account. DeLong admitted owing the $24,532.68 amount awarded, and, hence, it is a liquidated sum within the meaning of Georgia law. Council v. Hixon, 11 Ga. App. 818, 827, 76 S.E. 603Now, in calculating or figuring the measure of damages for price discrimination, one way that you might do that is this: The plaintiff would be entitled to recover the difference in the price of the product — strike that, that’s not what I want to charge there.
[74] CONCLUSION
[75] The judgment of the district court insofar as it denied Washington Mills’ motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is affirmed. The judgment insofar as it granted the motion for a new trial on Sherman Act damages is reversed, and on Robinson-Patman Act damages is affirmed. The judgment awarding pre-judgment interest on the counterclaim for open account indebtedness is affirmed.
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