Arthur H. Pitchford and Pitchford Scientific Instruments Corporation v. Pepi, Inc.

531 F.2d 92
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 1976
Docket75-1136 and 75-1137
StatusPublished
Cited by120 cases

This text of 531 F.2d 92 (Arthur H. Pitchford and Pitchford Scientific Instruments Corporation v. Pepi, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur H. Pitchford and Pitchford Scientific Instruments Corporation v. Pepi, Inc., 531 F.2d 92 (3d Cir. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ADAMS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs, the president of a corporation that deals in scientific instruments and the corporation itself, brought an antitrust suit alleging that the practices of a manufacturer had illegally restricted their business opportunities and ultimately resulted in the termination of the dealership, causing damages to both the corporation and its president. 1 After trial before a jury, a verdict for $825,000 was returned which was trebled by the trial court, and an attorney’s fee was awarded.

The manufacturer brings this appeal, asserting a series of contentions concerning the standing of the officer to sue, the proof of liability for the various antitrust violations set forth, the conduct of the trial, and the appropriate measure of damages in the event that liability was properly found. The manufacturer also complains about the amount of the attorney’s fee that was awarded and about the absence of an adequate explanation for such fee.

I. BACKGROUND OF THE SUIT.

Pitchford Scientific Instruments Corporation (Pitchford Scientific), a Pennsylvania corporation, and Arthur H. Pitchford, president and holder of all but one per cent of the stock of Pitchford Scientific, are the plaintiffs in this action. Mr. Pitchford and Pitchford Scientific will both be referred to as Pitchford, except where necessary to distinguish their separate claims. The defendants are North American Philips Corporation (NAP), Philips Electronic Instruments (PEI), and Philips Electronics & Pharmaceutical Industries (PEPI). 2 All the defendants will be referred to as PEI.

PEI markets three lines of sophisticated electronic instruments for industrial and scientific use: scientific and analytical, industrial, and medical. The alleged antitrust violations arose from Pitchford’s handling of the scientific-analytical and industrial lines under an annual dealership contract with PEI. The dealership contract *96 contained a clause allowing PEI to cancel the arrangement at any time, upon thirty days’ notice to Pitchford. PEI exercised this option, and the Pitchford dealership came to an end on September 10, 1970.

In its complaint, filed December 24, 1970, Pitchford claimed that PEI had violated both the Sherman and Clayton Acts by policies designed to implement price-fixing, exclusive dealing, full-line forcing, and territorial sales restraints. The plaintiffs asserted that such conduct caused injury to them while Pitchford Scientific acted as a dealer for PEI and, further, resulted in the eventual termination of the dealership. 3

Trial began on February 26, 1974, and in response to special interrogatories a verdict against PEI was returned on March 29, 1974. The verdict of $825,000 was divided as follows: $550,000 was awarded to Pitch-ford Scientific for the counts dealing with price-fixing, full-line forcing, exclusive dealing, and territorial restrictions; 4 $72,-000 was awarded Mr. Pitchford for substantially the same violations; and $203,000 was awarded Pitchford Scientific for damages resulting from the termination of the dealership. The $825,000 figure was trebled by the trial judge to $2,475,000.

On June 26, 1974, the court denied PEI’s motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial. The court then awarded plaintiffs an attorney’s fee in the amount of $645,250. On November 20, 1974, the trial judge denied PEI’s motion for alteration of this award.

PEI appeals on six grounds:

1. It was entitled to a directed verdict because Mr. Pitchford lacked standing to sue as an individual, Pitchford failed to prove PEI’s liability for price-fixing, exclusive dealing, full-line forcing, or territorial restraints, and there was no proof that the cancellation of the Pitchford dealership was related to any of the alleged antitrust violations.

2. In any event, PEI is entitled to a new trial because Pitchford introduced prejudicial material, improper hearsay, and inadmissible opinion evidence. In addition, PEI urges that a new trial is necessary since a considerable portion of the questioning by Pitchford’s counsel regarding price-fixing was deliberately misleading and because Pitchford’s counsel made improper remarks in his opening and closing arguments.

3. The evidence introduced by Pitchford on its lost profits and the value of the terminated dealership was improper.

4. The inclusion of the full-line forcing count in the special interrogatories to the jury was improper, since the count had been dismissed by the judge during the trial.

5. The charge was inadequate to guide the jury in properly applying the relevant law to the facts of the case.

6. The award of counsel fees was excessive and a proper predicate for such fees was not set forth.

In response, Pitchford contends that we should sustain the judgment based on the jury’s verdict and uphold the award of attorney’s fees.

We affirm in part, reverse in part, vacate in part, and remand.

II. MR. PITCHFORD’S STANDING TO SUE.

At trial Mr. Pitchford claimed that he was entitled to damages, because of income that he had lost as a result of the various restraints by PEI on Pitchford Scientific. Mr. Pitchford also sought to recover the salary he lost as president of another firm, not a party to this action, Pitchford Manufacturing. It was alleged that from 1962 to 1968 PEI obstructed the development by Pitchford Manufacturing of Portaspec, a product Mr. Pitchford was eager to place on the market. In addition to the award to Pitchford Scientific, the jury awarded $72,-000 to Mr. Pitchford for his personal claims.

*97 On appeal, Mr. Pitchford contends that, even without considering the Portaspec issue, he would be justified in recovering an amount “at least equal to his average annual earnings of $57,000 per year between 1967 and 1970.” Mr. Pitchford does not point to anything in the record to justify this particular measure of damages.

PEI, however, asserts that Mr. Pitchford had no standing to sue and that, consequently, the jury award to Mr. Pitchford as an individual was improper. Since the record indicates that PEI’s business was conducted with Pitchford Scientific and not with Mr. Pitchford personally, any injury under the alleged violations, PEI argues, was suffered by that corporation alone.

There is no proof that any of the restraints were directed against Mr. Pitch-ford individually as a shareholder or as an officer of either Pitchford Scientific or Pitchford Manufacturing. Consequently, any harm to Mr. Pitchford would have to flow derivatively from injuries done the companies of which he was a shareholder and an officer. 5

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