This suit for treble damages and an injunction by petitioner, a
local bakery company in Salt Lake City, against three large
companies each of which is a major factor in the frozen pie market
in one or more regions of the country, charged a conspiracy under
§§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act and violations by each
respondent of § 2(a) of the Clayton Act, as amended by the
Robinson-Patman Act. The major competitive weapon in the Salt Lake
City market was price, and, for most of the period, petitioner,
which had the advantage of a local plant, had the lowest prices.
Each respondent at some time engaged in discriminatory pricing, and
thereby contributed to a deteriorating price structure during the
relevant period. Respondent Pet Milk sold pies to Safeway under the
latter's label at a price well below that for its proprietary label
pies; it sold an economy pie in the Salt Lake City market at a
price which was at times lower than that in other markets, and it
sold its proprietary label quality pies in Salt Lake City for some
months at prices lower than those in California, despite freight
charges from its California plant. Pet admitted sending a spy into
petitioner's plant during its negotiations with Safeway, but denied
using what it learned. Pet did not deny that it suffered losses on
its pies during the greater part of the period involved. In June,
1961, respondent Continental Baking cut its price in the Utah area
to a level well below that applicable elsewhere, and less than its
direct cost plus an allocation for overhead. Carnation Co., whose
share of the market slipped in 1959, slashed its price in 1960,
and, for eight months of that year, its Salt Lake City price was
lower than that in other markets, and that trend continued in 1961.
The jury found for respondents on the conspiracy charge and for
petitioner on the price discrimination charge. Judgment was entered
for petitioner for damages, but the Court of Appeals reversed,
holding that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of
probable injury to competition within the meaning of § 2(a).
The court concluded that Pet's price differential to Safeway was
cost justified, and that Pet's
Page 386 U. S. 686
other discriminations did not provide sufficient basis on which
the jury could have found a reasonably possible injury to
petitioner as a competitive force or to competition generally. It
concluded that the conduct of Continental and Carnation had only
minimal effect, that it had not injured petitioner as a competitor,
and that it had not substantially lessened competition.
Held:
1. Section 2(a) does not forbid price competition, but it does
provide that sellers may not sell goods to different purchasers at
different prices if the result may be to injure competition in
either the sellers' or the buyers' market unless such
discriminations are justified as permitted by the Act. P.
386 U. S.
702.
(a) There can be a reasonably possible injury to competition
even though the volume of sales is rising and some of the
competitors in the market continue to operate at a profit. P.
386 U. S.
702.
(b) Section 2(a) does not come into play solely to regulate the
conduct of price discriminators who consistently undercut the
prices of other competitors. P.
386 U. S.
702.
2. The existence of predatory intent bears on the likelihood of
injury to competition. Pp.
386 U. S. 702-703.
(a) There was evidence of predatory intent with respect to each
of the respondents, and there was other evidence upon which the
jury could find the requisite injury to competition. Pp.
386 U. S.
702-703.
(b) Section 2(a) reaches price discrimination that erodes
competition as much as it does price discrimination that is
intended to have immediate destructive impact. P.
386 U. S.
703.
3. Since the statutory test is one that looks forward on the
basis of proven past conduct, the jury was entitled to conclude
that, where the evidence showed a drastically declining price
structure which could be attributed to continued or sporadic price
discrimination, "the effect of such discrimination" by
respondents
"may be substantially to lessen competition . . . or to injure,
destroy, or prevent competition with any person who either grants
or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination. . .
."
P.
386 U. S.
703.
349 F.2d 122, reversed and remanded.
Page 386 U. S. 687
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court
This suit for treble damages and injunction under §§ 4
and 16 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 731, 737, 15 U.S.C.
§§ 15 and 26 [
Footnote
1] was brought by petitioner, Utah Pie Company, against
respondents, Continental Baking Company, Carnation Company and Pet
Milk Company. The complaint charged a conspiracy under §§
1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 26 Stat. 209, as amended, 15 U.S.C.
§ 1 and 2, and violations by each respondent of § 2(a) of
the Clayton Act as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act, 49 Stat.
1526, 15 U.S.C. § 13(a). [
Footnote 2] The jury found for respondents on the
conspiracy charge and
Page 386 U. S. 688
for petitioner on the price discrimination charge. [
Footnote 3] Judgment was entered for
petitioner for damages and attorneys' fees, and respondents
appealed on several grounds. The Court of Appeals reversed,
addressing itself to the single issue of whether the evidence
against each of the respondents was sufficient to support a finding
of probable injury to competition within the meaning of §
2(a), and holding that it was not. 349 F.2d 122. We granted
certiorari. 382 U.S. 914. [
Footnote
4] We reverse.
Page 386 U. S. 689
The product involved is frozen dessert pies -- apple, cherry,
boysenberry, peach, pumpkin, and mince. The period covered by the
suit comprised the years 1958, 1959, and 1960 and the first eight
months of 1961. Petitioner is a Utah corporation which for 30 years
has been baking pies in its plant in Salt Lake City and selling
them in Utah and surrounding States. It entered the frozen pie
business in late 1957. It was immediately successful with its new
line and built a new plant in Salt Lake City in 1958. The frozen
pie market was a rapidly expanding one: 57,060 dozen frozen pies
were sold in the Salt Lake City market in 1958, 111,729 dozen in
1959, 184,569 dozen in 1960, and 266,908 dozen in 1961. Utah Pie's
share of this market in those years was 66.5%, 34.3%, 45.5%, and
45.3% respectively, its sales volume steadily increasing over the
four years. Its financial position also improved. Petitioner is
not, however, a large company. At the time of the trial, petitioner
operated with only 18 employees, nine of whom were members of the
Rigby family, which controlled the business. Its net worth
increased from $31,651.98 on October 31, 1957, to $68,802.13 on
October 31, 1961. Total sales were $238,000 in the year ended
October 31, 1957, $353,000 in 1958, $430,000 in 1959, $504,000 in
1960 and $589,000 in 1961. Its net income or loss for these same
years was a loss of $6,461 in 1957, and net income in the remaining
years of $7,090, $11,897, $7,636, and $9,216.
Each of the respondents is a large company and each of them is a
major factor in the frozen pie market in one or more regions of the
country. Each entered the Salt Lake City frozen pie market before
petitioner began freezing dessert pies. None of them had a plant in
Utah. By the end of the period involved in this suit, Pet had
plants in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and California; Continental in
Virginia, Iowa, and California, and Carnation in California. The
Salt Lake City market was supplied
Page 386 U. S. 690
by respondents chiefly from their California operations. They
sold primarily on a delivered price basis.
The "Utah" label was petitioner's proprietary brand. Beginning
in 1960, it also sold pies of like grade and quality under the
controlled label "Frost
N' Flame" to Associated Grocers, and,
in 1961, it began selling to American Food Stores under the
"Mayfresh" label. [Footnote 5]
It also, on a seasonal basis, sold pumpkin and mince frozen pies to
Safeway under Safeway's own "Bel-air" label.
The major competitive weapon in the Utah market was price. The
location of petitioner's plant gave it natural advantages in the
Salt Lake City marketing area and it entered the market at a price
below the then going prices for respondents' comparable pies. For
most of the period involved here, its prices were the lowest in the
Salt Lake City market. It was, however, challenged by each of the
respondents at one time or another and for varying periods. There
was ample evidence to show that each of the respondents contributed
to what proved to be a deteriorating price structure over the
period covered by this suit, and each of the respondents, in the
course of the ongoing price competition, sold frozen pies in the
Salt Lake market at prices lower than it sold pies of like grade
and quality in other markets considerably closer to its plants.
Utah Pie, which entered the market at a price of $4.15 per dozen at
the beginning of the relevant period, was selling "Utah" and "Frost
'N' Flame" pies for $2.75 per dozen when the instant suit was filed
some 44 months later. [
Footnote
6] Pet, which was offering pies at $4.92 per dozen in February,
1958, was offering
Page 386 U. S. 691
"Pet-Ritz" and "Bel-air" pies at $3.56 and $3.46 per dozen
respectively in March and April, 1961. Carnation's price in early
1958 was $4.82 per dozen, but it was selling at $3.46 per dozen at
the conclusion of the period, meanwhile having been down as low as
$3.30 per dozen. The price range experienced by Continental during
the period covered by this suit ran from a 1958 high of over $5 per
dozen to a 1961 low of $2.85 per dozen. [
Footnote 7]
Page 386 U. S. 692
I
We deal first with petitioner's case against the Pet Milk
Company. Pet entered the frozen pie business in 1955, acquired
plants in Pennsylvania and California, and undertook a large
advertising campaign to market its "Pet-Ritz" brand of frozen pies.
Pet's initial emphasis was on quality, but, in the face of
competition from regional and local companies and in an expanding
market where price proved to be a crucial factor, Pet was forced to
take steps to reduce the price of its pies to the ultimate
consumer. These developments had consequences in the Salt Lake City
market which are the substance of petitioner's case against
Pet.
First, Pet successfully concluded an arrangement with Safeway,
which is one of the three largest customers for frozen pies in the
Salt Lake market, whereby it would sell frozen pies to Safeway
under the latter's own "Belair" label at a price significantly
lower than it was selling its comparable "Pet-Ritz" brand in the
same Salt Lake market and elsewhere. [
Footnote 8] The initial price on "Bel-air"
Page 386 U. S. 693
pies was slightly lower than Utah's price for its "Utah" brand
of pies at the time, and, near the end of the period, the "Bel-air"
price was comparable to the "Utah" price but higher than Utah's
"Frost
N' Flame" brand. Pet's Safeway business amounted to
22.8%, 12.3%, and 6.3% of the entire Salt Lake City market for the
years 1959, 1960, and 1961, respectively, and to 64%, 44%, and 22%
of Pet's own Salt Lake City sales for those same years.
Second, it introduced a 20-ounce economy pie under the "Swiss
Miss" label and began selling the new pie in the Salt Lake market
in August, 1960, at prices ranging from $3.25 to $3.30 for the
remainder of the period. This pie was at times sold at a lower
price in the Salt Lake City market than it was sold in other
markets.
Third, Pet became more competitive with respect to the prices
for its "Pet-Ritz" proprietary label. For 18 of the relevant 44
months, its offering price for Pet-Ritz pies was $4 per dozen or
lower, and $3.70 or lower for six of these months. According to the
Court of Appeals, in seven of the 44 months, Pet's prices in Salt
Lake were lower than prices charged in the California markets. This
was true although selling in Salt Lake involved a 30- to 35-cent
freight cost.
The Court of Appeals first concluded that Pet's price
differential on sales to Safeway must be put aside in considering
injury to competition because, in its view of the evidence, the
differential had been completely cost justified, and because Utah
would not, in any event, have been able to enjoy the Safeway
custom. Second, it concluded that the remaining discriminations on
"Pet-Ritz" and "Swiss Miss" pies were an insufficient predicate on
which the jury could have found a reasonably possible injury either
to Utah Pie as a competitive force or to competition generally.
We disagree with the Court of Appeals in several respects.
First, there was evidence from which the jury
Page 386 U. S. 694
could have found considerably more price discrimination by Pet
with respect to "Pet-Ritz" and "Swiss Miss" pies than was
considered by the Court of Appeals. In addition to the seven months
during which Pet's prices in Salt Lake were lower than prices in
the California markets, there was evidence from which the jury
could reasonably have found that, in 10 additional months, the Salt
Lake City prices for "Pet-Ritz" pies were discriminatory as
compared with sales in western markets other than California.
Likewise, with respect to "Swiss Miss" pies, there was evidence in
the record from which the jury could have found that, in five of
the 13 months during which the "Swiss Miss" pies were sold prior to
the filing of this suit, prices in Salt Lake City were lower than
those charged by Pet in either California or some other western
market.
Second, with respect to Pet's Safeway business, the burden of
proving cost justification was on Pet, [
Footnote 9] and, in our view, reasonable men could have
found that Pet's lower priced, "Bel-air" sales to Safeway were not
cost justified in their entirety. Pet introduced cost data for 1961
indicating a cost saving on the Safeway business greater than the
price advantage extended to that customer. These statistics were
not particularized for the Salt Lake market, but, assuming that
they were adequate to justify the 1961 sales, they related to only
24% of the Safeway sales over the relevant period. The evidence
concerning the remaining 76% was, at best, incomplete and
inferential. It was insufficient to take the
Page 386 U. S. 695
defense of cost justification from the jury, which reasonably
could have found a greater incidence of unjustified price
discrimination than that allowed by the Court of Appeals' view of
the evidence. [
Footnote
10]
With respect to whether Utah would have enjoyed Safeway's
business absent the Pet contract with Safeway, it seems clear that,
whatever the fact is in this regard, it is not determinative of the
impact of that contract on competitors other than Utah and on
competition generally. There were other companies seeking the
Safeway business, including Continental and Carnation, whose pies
may have been excluded from the Safeway shelves by what the jury
could have found to be discriminatory sales to Safeway. [
Footnote 11] What is more, Pet's
evidence that Utah's unwillingness to install quality control
equipment prevented Utah from enjoying Safeway's private label
business is not the only evidence in the record relevant to that
question. There was other evidence to the contrary.
Page 386 U. S. 696
The jury would not have been compelled to find that Utah Pie
could not have gained more of the Safeway business.
Third, the Court of Appeals almost entirely ignored other
evidence which provides material support for the jury's conclusion
that Pet's behavior satisfied the statutory test regarding
competitive injury. This evidence bore on the issue of Pet's
predatory intent to injure Utah Pie. [
Footnote 12] As an initial matter, the jury could have
concluded
Page 386 U. S. 697
that Pet's discriminatory pricing was aimed at Utah Pie; Pet's
own management, as early as 1959, identified Utah Pie as an
"unfavorable factor," one which "d[u]g holes in our operation" and
posed a constant "check" on Pet's performance in the Salt Lake City
market. Moreover, Pet candidly admitted that, during the period
when it was establishing its relationship with Safeway, it sent
into Utah Pie's plant an industrial spy to seek information that
would be of use to Pet in convincing Safeway that Utah Pie was not
worthy of its custom. Pet denied that it ever, in fact, used what
it had learned against Utah Pie in competing for Safeway's
business. The parties, however, are not the ultimate judges of
credibility. But even giving Pet's view of the incident a measure
of weight does not mean the jury was foreclosed from considering
the predatory intent underlying Pet's mode of competition. Finally,
Pet does not deny that the evidence showed it suffered substantial
losses on its frozen pie sales during the greater part of the time
involved in this suit, and there was evidence from which the jury
could have concluded that the losses Pet sustained in Salt Lake
City were greater than those incurred elsewhere. It would not have
been an irrational step if the jury concluded that there was a
relationship between price and the losses.
It seems clear to us that the jury heard adequate evidence from
which it could have concluded that Pet had engaged in predatory
tactics in waging competitive warfare in the Salt Lake City market.
Coupled with the incidence of price discrimination attributable to
Pet,
Page 386 U. S. 698
the evidence as a whole established, rather than negated, the
reasonable possibility that Pet's behavior produced a lessening of
competition proscribed by the Act.
II
Petitioner's case against Continental is not complicated.
Continental was a substantial factor in the market in 1957. But its
sales of frozen 22-ounce dessert pies, sold under the "Morton"
brand, amounted to only 1.3% of the market in 1958, 2.9% in 1959,
and 1.8% in 1960. Its problems were primarily that of cost, and, in
turn, that of price, the controlling factor in the market. In late
1960, it worked out a co-packing arrangement in California by which
fruit would be processed directly from the trees into the finished
pie without large intermediate packing, storing, and shipping
expenses. Having improved its position, it attempted to increase
its share of the Salt Lake City market by utilizing a local broker
and offering short-term price concessions in varying amounts. Its
efforts for seven months were not spectacularly successful. Then,
in June, 1961, it took the steps which are the heart of
petitioner's complaint against it. Effective for the last two weeks
of June, it offered its 22-ounce frozen apple pies in the Utah area
at $2.85 per dozen. It was then selling the same pies at
substantially higher prices in other markets. The Salt Lake City
price was less than its direct cost plus an allocation for
overhead. Utah's going price at the time for its 24-ounce "Frost
N' Flame" apple pie sold to Associated Grocers was $3.10 per
dozen, and, for its "Utah" brand, $3.40 per dozen. At its new
prices, Continental sold pies to American Grocers in Pocatello,
Idaho, and to American Food Stores in Ogden, Utah. Safeway, one of
the major buyers in Salt Lake City, also purchased 6,250 dozen, its
requirements for about five weeks. Another purchaser ordered 1,000
dozen. Utah's response was immediate. It reduced
Page 386 U. S.
699
its price on all of its apple pies to $2.75 per dozen.
Continental refused Safeway's request to match Utah's price, but
renewed its offer at the same prices effective July 31 for another
two-week period. Utah filed suit on September 8, 1961.
Continental's total sales of frozen pies increased from 3,350 dozen
in 1960 to 18,800 dozen in 1961. Its market share increased from
1.8% in 1960 to 8.3% in 1961. The Court of Appeals concluded that
Continental's conduct had had only minimal effect, that it had not
injured or weakened Utah Pie as a competitor, that it had not
substantially lessened competition, and that there was no
reasonable possibility that it would do so in the future.
We again differ with the Court of Appeals. Its opinion that Utah
was not damaged as a competitive force apparently rested on the
fact that Utah's sales volume continued to climb in 1961, and on
the court's own factual conclusion that Utah was not deprived of
any pie business which it otherwise might have had. But this
retrospective assessment fails to note that Continental's
discriminatory below-cost price caused Utah Pie to reduce its price
to $2.75. The jury was entitled to consider the potential impact of
Continental's price reduction absent any responsive price cut by
Utah Pie. Price was a major factor in the Salt Lake City market.
Safeway, which had been buying Utah brand pies, immediately reacted
and purchased a five-week supply of frozen pies from Continental,
thereby temporarily foreclosing the proprietary brands of Utah and
other firms from the Salt Lake City Safeway market. The jury could
rationally have concluded that, had Utah not lowered its price,
Continental, which repeated its offer once, would have continued
it, that Safeway would have continued to buy from Continental and
that other buyers, large as well as small, would have followed
suit. It could also have reasonably concluded that a competitor who
is forced to
Page 386 U. S. 700
reduce his price to a new all-time low in a market of declining
prices will, in time feel, the financial pinch, and will be a less
effective competitive force.
Even if the impact on Utah Pie as a competitor was negligible,
there remain the consequences to others in the market who had to
compete not only with Continental's 22-ounce pie at $2.85, but with
Utah's even lower price of $2.75 per dozen for both its proprietary
and controlled labels. Petitioner and respondents were not the only
sellers in the Salt Lake City market, although they did account for
91.8% of the sales in 1961. The evidence was that there were nine
other sellers in 1960 who sold 23,473 dozen pies, 12.7% of the
total market. In 1961, there were eight other sellers who sold less
than the year before -- 18,565 dozen or 8.2% of the total --
although the total market had expanded from 184,569 dozen to
226,908 dozen. We think there was sufficient evidence from which
the jury could find a violation of § 2(a) by Continental.
III
The Carnation Company entered the frozen dessert pie business in
1955 through the acquisition of "Mrs. Lee's Pies" which was then
engaged in manufacturing and selling frozen pies in Utah and
elsewhere under the "Simple Simon" label. Carnation also quickly
found the market extremely sensitive to price. Carnation decided,
however, not to enter an economy product in the market, and, during
the period covered by this suit, it offered only its quality
"Simple Simon" brand. Its primary method of meeting competition in
its markets was to offer a variety of discounts and other
reductions, and the technique was not unsuccessful. In 1958, for
example, Carnation enjoyed 10.3% of the Salt Lake City market, and
although its volume of pies sold in that market increased
substantially in the next year, its percentage of the market
temporarily slipped to 8.6%. However, 1960 was a turnaround year
for Carnation in
Page 386 U. S. 701
the Salt Lake City market; it more than doubled its volume of
sales over the preceding year, and thereby gained 12.1% of the
market. And while the price structure in the market deteriorated
rapidly in 1961, Carnation's position remained important.
We need not dwell long upon the case against Carnation, which,
in some respects, is similar to that against Continental and in
others more nearly resembles the case against Pet. After
Carnation's temporary setback in 1959, it instituted a new pricing
policy to regain business in the Salt Lake City market. The new
policy involved a slash in price of 60� per dozen pies,
which brought Carnation's price to a level admittedly well below
its costs, and well below the other prices prevailing in the
market. The impact of the move was felt immediately, and the two
other major sellers in the market reduced their prices. Carnation's
banner year, 1960, in the end involved eight months during which
the prices in Salt Lake City were lower than prices charged in
other markets. The trend continued during the eight months in 1961
that preceded the filing of the complaint in this case. In each of
those months, the Salt Lake City prices charged by Carnation were
well below prices charged in other markets, and in all but August,
1961, the Salt Lake City delivered price was 20� to
50� lower than the prices charged in distant San Francisco.
The Court of Appeals held that only the early 1960 prices could be
found to have been below cost. That holding, however, simply
overlooks evidence from which the jury could have concluded that,
throughout 1961, Carnation maintained a below-cost price structure
and that Carnation's discriminatory pricing, no less than that of
Pet and Continental, had an important effect on the Salt Lake City
market. We cannot say that the evidence precluded the jury from
finding it reasonably possible that Carnation's conduct would
injure competition.
Page 386 U. S. 702
IV
Section 2(a) does not forbid price competition which will
probably injure or lessen competition by eliminating competitors,
discouraging entry into the market, or enhancing the market shares
of the dominant sellers. But Congress has established some ground
rules for the game. Sellers may not sell like goods to different
purchasers at different prices if the result may be to injure
competition in either the sellers' or the buyers' market unless
such discriminations are justified as permitted by the Act. This
case concerns the sellers' market. In this context, the Court of
Appeals placed heavy emphasis on the fact that Utah Pie constantly
increased its sales volume and continued to make a profit. But we
disagree with its apparent view that there is no reasonably
possible injury to competition as long as the volume of sales in a
particular market is expanding and at least some of the competitors
in the market continue to operate at a profit. Nor do we think that
the Act only comes into play to regulate the conduct of price
discriminators when their discriminatory prices consistently
undercut other competitors. It is true that many of the primary
line cases that have reached the courts have involved blatant
predatory price discriminations employed with the hope of immediate
destruction of a particular competitor. On the question of injury
to competition, such cases present courts with no difficulty, for
such pricing is clearly within the heart of the proscription of the
Act. Courts and commentators alike have noted that the existence of
predatory intent might bear on the likelihood of injury to
competition. [
Footnote 13]
In this case, there was some evidence of predatory intent with
respect to each of these respondents. [
Footnote 14] There was also other evidence upon which
the
Page 386 U. S. 703
jury could rationally find the requisite injury to competition.
The frozen pie market in Salt Lake City was highly competitive. At
times, Utah Pie was a leader in moving the general level of prices
down, and, at other times, each of the respondents also bore
responsibility for the downward pressure on the price structure. We
believe that the Act reaches price discrimination that erodes
competition as much as it does price discrimination that is
intended to have immediate destructive impact. In this case, the
evidence shows a drastically declining price structure which the
jury could rationally attribute to continued or sporadic price
discrimination. The jury was entitled to conclude that "the effect
of such discrimination," by each of these respondents,
"may be substantially to lessen competition . . . or to injure,
destroy, or prevent competition with any person who either grants
or knowingly receives the benefit of such discrimination. . .
."
The statutory test is one that necessarily looks forward on the
basis of proven conduct in the past. Proper application of that
standard here requires reversal of the judgment of the Court of
Appeals. [
Footnote 15]
Page 386 U. S. 704
Since the Court of Appeals held that petitioner had failed to
make a
prima facie case against each of the respondents,
it expressly declined to pass on other grounds for reversal
presented by the respondents. 349 F.2d 122, 126. Without intimating
any views on the other grounds presented to the Court of Appeals,
we reverse its judgment and remand the case to that court for
further proceedings.
It is so ordered.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE took no part in the decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
15 U.S.C. § 15 provides that:
"Any person who shall be injured in his business or property by
reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue therefor
in any district court of the United States in the district in which
the defendant resides or is found or has an agent, without respect
to the amount in controversy, and shall recover threefold the
damages by him sustained, and the cost of suit, including a
reasonable attorney's fee."
15 U.S.C. § 26 provides injunctive relief for private
parties from violation of the antitrust laws.
[
Footnote 2]
The portion of § 2(a) relevant to the issue before the
Court provides:
"That it shall be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce,
in the course of such commerce, either directly or indirectly, to
discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities
of like grade and quality, where either or any of the purchases
involved in such discrimination are in commerce . . . where the
effect of such discrimination may be substantially to lessen
competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce,
or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition with any person who
either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such
discrimination, or with customers of either of them. . . ."
[
Footnote 3]
Respondent Continental, by counterclaim, charged petitioner with
violation of § 2(a) in respect to certain sales. On this
issue, the jury found for Continental, and although petitioner
failed to move for a directed verdict on the counterclaim before
its submission to the jury, the trial judge granted petitioner's
motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The Court of
Appeals reversed the judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the
counterclaim, and remanded the issue for a new trial. No question
concerning the counterclaim is before the Court.
[
Footnote 4]
The order allowing certiorari requested counsel to brief and
discuss at oral argument, in addition to the questions presented by
the petition, the following questions:
"1. Whether, if this Court affirms the judgment and order of the
Court of Appeals directing the District Court to enter judgment for
respondents, petitioner can then make a motion for new trial under
Rule 50(c)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure within 10
days of the District Court's entry of judgment for
respondents?"
"2. Whether, if, under the order of the Court of Appeals,
petitioner cannot make a motion for new trial under Rule 50(c)(2)
within 10 days of the District Court's entry of judgment against
him, the order of the Court of Appeals directing the District Court
to enter judgment for respondents is compatible with Rule 50(b) as
interpreted by this Court in
Cone v. West Virginia Pulp &
Paper Co., 330 U. S. 212;
Globe Liquor
Co. v. San Roman, 332 U. S. 571, and
Weade v.
Dichmann, Wright & Pugh, 337 U. S. 801?"
"3. Whether Rule 50(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
provides the Court of Appeals with any authority to direct the
entry of judgment for respondents?"
In the light of our disposition of this case, we need not reach
these questions.
[
Footnote 5]
Beginning in February, 1960, petitioner sold frozen pies to a
Spokane, Washington, buyer under the "Sonny Boy" label.
[
Footnote 6]
The prices discussed herein refer to those charged for apple
pies. The apple flavor has been used as the standard throughout
this case without objection from the parties, and we adhere to the
practice here.
[
Footnote 7]
The Salt Lake City sales volumes and market shares of the
parties to this suit as well as of other sellers during the period
at issue were as follows:
1958
Volume Percent
Company (in doz.) of Market
Carnation. . . . . . . . . . . . 5,863 10.3
Continental. . . . . . . . . . . 754 1.3
Utah Pie . . . . . . . . . . . . 37,969.5 66.5
Pet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9,336.5 16.4
Others . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,137 5.5
Total . . . . . . . . . . . 57,060 100.0
1959
Carnation. . . . . . . . . . . . 9,625 8.6
Continental. . . . . . . . . . . 3,182 2.9
Utah Pie . . . . . . . . . . . . 38,372 34.3
Pet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39,639 35.5
Others . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20,911 18.7
Total . . . . . . . . . . . 111,729 100.0
1960
Carnation. . . . . . . . . . . . 22,371.5 12.1
Continental. . . . . . . . . . . 3,350 1.8
Utah Pie . . . . . . . . . . . . 83,894 45.5
Pet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51,480 27.9
Others . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23,473.5 12.7
Total . . . . . . . . . . . 184,569 100.0
1961
Carnation. . . . . . . . . . . . 20,067 8.8
Continental. . . . . . . . . . . 18,799.5 8.3
Utah Pie . . . . . . . . . . . . 102,690 45.3
Pet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66,786 29.4
Others . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18,565.5 8.2
Total. . . . . . . . . . . 226,908 100.0
[
Footnote 8]
The Pet-Safeway contract, entered into on January 1, 1960,
obligated the Safeway organization to purchase a minimum of
1,000,000 cases (six pies per case) from Pet during the year. The
contract was orally renewed for one year, and thereafter to the
time of the trial, the production of "Bel-air" pies by Pet for
Safeway was continued without a formal contract. All of the volume
of the Safeway purchases under the contract, of course, did not
find its way to the Salt Lake City market.
[
Footnote 9]
Section 2(b) of the Robinson-Patman Act assigns the burden.
"Upon proof being made, at any hearing on a complaint under this
section, that there has been discrimination in price or services or
facilities furnished, the burden of rebutting the prima facie case
thus made by showing justification shall be upon the person charged
with a violation of this section. . . ."
49 Stat. 1526, 15 U.S.C. § 13(b).
See F.T.C. v. Morton
Salt Co., 334 U. S. 37,
334 U. S. 44-45;
United States v. Borden Co., 370 U.
S. 460,
370 U. S.
467.
[
Footnote 10]
The only evidence cited by the Court of Appeals to justify the
remaining 76% of Pet's sales to Safeway was Safeway's established
practice of requiring its sellers to cost justify sales that
otherwise would be illegally discriminatory. This practice was
incorporated in the Pet-Safeway contract. We are unprepared to hold
that a contractual obligation to cost justify price differentials
is legally dispositive proof that such differentials are, in fact,
so justified. Pet admitted that its cost-justification figures were
drawn from past performance, so, even crediting the data
accompanying the 1960 contract regarding cost differences, Pet's
additional evidence would bring under the justification umbrella
only the 1959 sales. Thus, at the least, the jury was free to
consider the 1960 Safeway sales as inadequately cost justified.
Those sales accounted for 12.35% of the entire Salt Lake City
market in that year. In the context of this case, the sales to
Safeway are particularly relevant, since there was evidence that
private label sales influenced the general market, in this case
depressing overall market prices.
[
Footnote 11]
The jury was, in fact, charged that it could find for petitioner
if, from respondents' conduct, "there is reasonably likely to be a
substantial injury to competition
among sellers of frozen pies
in the Utah area." R. at 1355. (Emphasis supplied.)
[
Footnote 12]
The dangers of predatory price discrimination were recognized in
Moore v. Mead's Fine Bread Co., 348 U.
S. 115, where such pricing was held violative of §
2(a). Subsequently, the Court noted that
"the decisions of the federal courts in primary line competition
cases . . . consistently emphasize the unreasonably low prices and
the predatory intent of the defendants."
F.T.C. v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc., 363 U.
S. 536,
363 U. S. 548.
See also Balian Ice Cream Co. v. Arden Farms Co., 231 F.2d
356, 369;
Maryland Baking Co. v. F.T.C., 243 F.2d 716;
Atlas Building Prod. Co. v. Diamond Block & Gravel Co., 269
F.2d 950; Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. F.T.C., 289 F.2d 835. In the
latter case, the court went so far as to suggest that:
"If . . . the projection [to ascertain the future effect of
price discrimination] is based upon predatoriness or buccaneering,
it can reasonably be forecast that an adverse effect on competition
may occur. In that event, the discriminations in their incipiency
are such that they may have the prescribed effect to establish a
violation of § 2(a). If one engages in the latter type of
pricing activity, a reasonable probability may be inferred that its
willful misconduct may substantially lessen, injure, destroy or
prevent competition."
289 F.2d at 843. Chief Justice Hughes noted in a related
antitrust context that "knowledge of actual intent is an aid in the
interpretation of facts and prediction of consequences."
Appalachian Coals, Inc. v. United States, 288 U.
S. 344,
288 U. S. 372,
and we do not think it unreasonable for courts to follow that lead.
Although the evidence in this regard against Pet seems obvious, a
jury would be free to ascertain a seller's intent from surrounding
economic circumstances, which would include persistent unprofitable
sales below cost and drastic price cuts themselves discriminatory.
See Rowe, Price Discrimination Under the Robinson-Patman
Act 141-150 (1962), commenting on the Court's statement in
F.T.C. v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc., supra, that "a price
reduction below cost tends to establish [predatory] intent." 363
U.S. at
363 U. S. 552.
See also Ben Hur Coal Co v. Wells, 242 F.2d 481, 486, and
Balian Ice Cream Co. v. Arden Farms Co., supra, at 368, in
which the courts recognized the inferential value of sales below
cost on the issue of intent.
[
Footnote 13]
See n 12,
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
It might be argued that the respondents' conduct displayed only
fierce competitive instincts. Actual intent to injure another
competitor does not, however, fall into that category, and neither,
when viewed in the context of the Robinson-Patman Act, do
persistent sales below cost and radical price cuts themselves
discriminatory. Nor does the fact that a local competitor has a
major share of the market make him fair game for discriminatory
price-cutting free of Robinson-Patman Act proscriptions.
"The Clayton Act proscription as to discrimination in price is
not nullified merely because of a showing that the existing
competition in a particular market had a major share of the sales
of the product involved."
Maryland Baking Co., 5 F.T.C. 1679, 169,
aff'd, 243 F.2d 716. In that case, the local competitor's
share of the market when price discrimination began was 91.3%, yet
the Federal Trade Commission was not impressed by the argument that
the effect of the discrimination had been to terminate a monopoly
and to create a competitive market.
[
Footnote 15]
Each respondent argues here that prior price discrimination
cases in the courts and before the Federal Trade Commission, in
which no primary line injury to competition was found, establish a
standard which compels affirmance of the Court of Appeals' holding.
But the cases upon which the respondents rely are readily
distinguishable. In
Anheuser-Busch, Inc. v. F.T.C., 289
F.2d 835, 839, there was no general decline in price structure
attributable to the defendant's price discriminations, nor was
there any evidence that the price discriminations were "a single
lethal weapon aimed at a victim for a predatory purpose."
Id. at 842. In
Borden Co. v. F.T.C., 339 F.2d
953, the court reversed the Commission's decision on price
discrimination in one market for want of sufficient interstate
connection, and the Commission's charge regarding the other market
failed to show any lasting impact upon prices caused by the single,
isolated incident of price discrimination proved. Absence of proof
that the alleged injury was due to challenged price discriminations
was determinative in
International Milling Co., CCH Trade
Reg.Rep. Transfer Binder, 1963-1965, �� 16,494,
16,648. In
Uarco, Inc., CCH Trade Reg.Rep. Transfer
Binder, 1963-1965, � 16,807, there was no evidence from
which predatory intent could be inferred and no evidence of a
long-term market price decline. Similar failure of proof and
absence of sales below cost were evident in
Quaker Oats
Co., CCH Trade Reg.Rep. Transfer Binder, 1963-1965, �
17, 134.
Dean Milk Co., 3 Trade Reg.Rep. � 17,357,
is not to the contrary. There, in the one market where the
Commission found no primary line injury, there was no evidence of a
generally declining price structure.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN joins,
dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment, agreeing substantially with the
reasoning of the Court of Appeals as expressed
Page 386 U. S. 705
in the thorough and conscientious opinion of Judge Phillips.
There is only one issue in this case in its present posture:
whether the respondents engaged in price discrimination
"where the effect of such discrimination may be substantially to
lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of
commerce, or to injure, destroy, or prevent competition with any
person who either grants or knowingly receives the benefit of such
discrimination. . . . [
Footnote
2/1]"
Phrased more simply, did the respondents' actions have the
anticompetitive effect required by the statute as an element of a
cause of action?
The Court's own description of the Salt Lake City frozen pie
market from 1958 through 1961 shows that the answer to that
question must be no. [
Footnote 2/2]
In 1958, Utah Pie had a
quasi-monopolistic 66.5% of the
market. In 1961 -- after the alleged predations of the respondents
-- Utah Pie still had a commanding 45.3%, Pet had 29.4%, and the
remainder of the market was divided almost equally between
Continental, Carnation, and other, small local, bakers. Unless we
disregard the lessons so laboriously learned in scores of Sherman
and Clayton Act cases, the 1961 situation has to be considered more
competitive than that of 1958. Thus, if we assume that the price
discrimination proven against the respondents had any effect on
competition, that effect must have been beneficent.
That the Court has fallen into the error of reading the
Robinson-Patman Act as protecting competitors, instead of
competition, can be seen from its unsuccessful attempt to
distinguish cases relied upon by the respondents. [
Footnote 2/3] Those cases are said to be inapposite
because they
Page 386 U. S. 706
involved "no general decline in price structure," and no
"lasting impact upon prices." But lower prices are the hallmark of
intensified competition.
The Court of Appeals squarely identified the fallacy which the
Court today embraces:
". . . a contention that Utah Pie was entitled to hold the
extraordinary market share percentage of 66.5, attained in 1958,
falls of its own dead weight. To approve such a contention would be
to hold that Utah Pie was entitled to maintain a position which
approached, if it did not, in fact, amount to, a monopoly, and
could not exist in the face of proper and healthy competition."
349 F.2d 122, 155.
I cannot hold that Utah Pie's monopolistic position was
protected by the federal antitrust laws from effective price
competition, and I therefore respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act as amended by the
Robinson-Patman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 13(a).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See ante, p.
386 U. S. 691,
n. 7.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See ante, p.
386 U. S. 703,
n. 15.