a legal framework for indirect purchaser class actions

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ANTITRUST & TRADE REGULATION SEMINAR Santa Fe July 2-5 2008 A Legal Framework For Indirect Purchaser Class Actions Why Understanding the Economics of Pass-Through Matters More Than Ever Paul H. Friedman Partner

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A Legal Framework For Indirect Purchaser Class Actions. Why Understanding the Economics of Pass-Through Matters More Than Ever. Paul H. Friedman Partner. Indirect Purchaser Claims Arise Under State Law. Hanover Shoe v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 392 U.S. 481 (1968) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

ANTITRUST & TRADE REGULATION SEMINAR

Santa Fe July 2-5 2008

A Legal Framework For Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

Why Understanding the Economics of Pass-Through Matters More Than Ever

Paul H. FriedmanPartner

Page 2: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

2

Indirect Purchaser Claims Arise Under State Law

Hanover Shoe v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 392 U.S. 481 (1968)

– The victim of an overcharge is damaged within the meaning of § 4 of the Clayton Act to the extent of the overcharge

– The pass-on defense generally is not available even if the plaintiff passed on all or part of the overcharge

– No defensive use of pass-through under federal antitrust law

Page 3: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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Indirect Purchaser Claims Arise Under State Law

Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois, 431 U.S. 720 (1977)

– Hanover Shoe principle bars an indirect purchaser from maintaining a claim against a remote seller for illegal overcharges allegedly passed down through the distribution chain

– No offensive use of pass-through

Page 4: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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Indirect Purchaser Claims Arise Under State Law

States adopt Illinois Brick repealers

– 25 states and D.C. explicitly permit direct and indirect purchasers to recover damages for state law antitrust violations

– Other states permit indirect purchasers to recover under state consumer protection laws

– California v. ARC America Corp., 490 U.S. 93 (1989) holds no preemption of state law indirect purchaser statutes

Page 5: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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CAFA Increased the Likelihood of Federal Court Jurisdiction

Prior to 2005, most jurisprudence on pass-through came from the state courts

The Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (CAFA) significantly expanded federal diversity jurisdiction over class actions

Several district courts have applied CAFA’s relaxed diversity jurisdiction requirements to support jurisdiction over indirect purchaser class actions

– In re Intel Corp. Microprocessor Antitrust Litig.

– In re OSB Antitrust Litig.

Page 6: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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Pass-Through Is an Essential Element of an Indirect Case

Direct purchaser must prove i) a violation; ii) impact; and iii) amount of damages

Indirect purchaser must prove the above AND pass-through

– “Proof of impact has been far more troubling for plaintiffs proposing class certification of indirect purchasers. Because indirect purchasers must demonstrate that any overcharges resulting from the illegal action of the defendants have been passed on to them, an entirely separate level of evidence and proof is injected into [indirect purchaser litigation].” Karofsky, 1997 WL 34504651 at 11

Page 7: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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Pass-Through Is an Essential Element of an Indirect Case

Every indirect purchaser must prove antitrust injury or impact

– Requires proof thatThe indirect purchaser paid more than it would have

absent the alleged illegal conduct

The higher price resulted from the alleged illegal conduct

In other words, the remote purchaser must show that the original unlawful conduct caused the remote purchaser to pay more

Page 8: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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Pass-Through Is an Essential Element of an Indirect Case

Since indirect purchaser does not deal directly with the alleged wrongdoer, indirect purchaser must show that all intermediaries passed through some or all of the overcharge

– Pass-through must be shown at each level of distribution

– If any intermediate absorbs the price increase, there is no pass-through

Page 9: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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Pass-Through Must Be Addressed At Class Certification

Rule 23 (b)(3) requires plaintiffs to demonstrate that they have a method that uses common class-wide proof to show that each proposed class member paid more than it would have by reason of the alleged conspiracy

Where individualized inquiries of impact predominate, certification should be denied

Page 10: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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A Case Study: In re OSB Antitrust Litigation

Indirect purchasers of oriented strand board (OSB), a building material used in home construction, sued on behalf of

– Buyers of new homes

– Buyers of home renovation services

– Do-it-yourselfers who bought OSB

Page 11: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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A Case Study: In re OSB Antitrust Litigation

Confounding factors affecting class-wide proof of pass-through

– Complex distribution channels

– Different product/different market

– OSB accounted for tiny fraction of cost of home

– Most home buyers were 1-time buyers during class period

– Different supply and demand factors affecting OSB and housing markets

Page 12: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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A Case Study: In re OSB Antitrust Litigation

Court denied certification of proposed home buyer class– Plaintiffs have not shown that impact and causation

are susceptible of common proof

– Court rejected plaintiffs’ economic testimony because expert failed to identify the variables needed to prove theory of pass-through of OSB overcharges to home price

– Court faulted plaintiffs’ economist for relying “almost entirely on economic theory and generalizations about market competitiveness and ‘elasticities’ of supply and demand without analyzing the competitiveness or elasticities of actual housing markets.”

Page 13: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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A Case Study: In re OSB Antitrust Litigation

Court did certify DIY class

– Plaintiffs’ economist traced channels of distribution from manufacturer to distributor to reseller and found pass-through nearly 100%

– Plaintiffs’ economist appears to have considered appropriate variables and data in creating regression

– Plaintiffs showed that impact to end users who purchased actual OSB is susceptible of common proof

Page 14: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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A Case Study: In re OSB Antitrust Litigation

OSB court relied heavily on the following passage from Illinois Brick:– Under an array of simplifying assumptions, economic

theory provides a precise formula for calculating how the overcharge is distributed between the [passer] and its customers (passees). … Even if these assumptions are accepted, there remains a serious problem of measuring the relevant elasticities, the percentage change in the quantities of the passer’s product demanded and supplied in response to a one percent change in price. In view of these difficulties … it is unrealistic to think that elasticity studies introduced by expert witnesses will resolve the pass-on issue

Page 15: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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What’s Next?

Will Congress adopt the AMC’s proposal

– Overrule Illinois Brick and Hanover Shoe

– Allow removal of indirect purchaser actions

– Allow consolidation of direct and indirect purchaser actions

– Limit damages to overcharges—trebled

– Apportion damages among all plaintiffs based on actual damages suffered

Page 16: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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What’s Next

Will the EC’s White Paper on Private Damages for Cartel Infringement lead to new damage actions in Europe

– Indirect purchaser actions—including actions by residual purchasers—would be allowed

– Passing-on defense would be available

– But indirect purchasers would benefit from rebuttable presumption that illegal overcharge passed on to them in entirety

– Overcharge and lost profits both would be recoverable

Page 17: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

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What’s Next

The need for economic analysis of pass-through will only grow

Page 18: A Legal Framework  For  Indirect Purchaser Class Actions

ANTITRUST & TRADE REGULATION SEMINAR

Santa Fe July 2-5 2008

A Legal Framework For

Indirect Purchaser Class ActionsWhy Understanding the Economics of Pass-Through Matters More Than Ever

Paul H. FriedmanPartner