Eiberger v. Sony Corp. of America

459 F. Supp. 1276, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15105
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 5, 1978
Docket76 Civ. 3677 (CLB)
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 459 F. Supp. 1276 (Eiberger v. Sony Corp. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eiberger v. Sony Corp. of America, 459 F. Supp. 1276, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15105 (S.D.N.Y. 1978).

Opinion

FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

BRIE ANT, District Judge.

This action was filed on August 18, 1976, and tried before the Court without a jury beginning on June 6, 1977 and concluding on June 15, 1977. Plaintiffs seek damages and equitable relief based on the contention that defendant has engaged in business practices violative of § 1 of the Sherman Act (15 U.S.C. § 1). Defendant denies liability, and counterclaims for the sum of $11,897.57 due and owing by plaintiffs for merchandise purchased on account, as well as for warranty fees debited to their account.

Plaintiff, Horst A. Eiberger (“Eiberger”) is domiciled in the State of Georgia where he does business under the name of Atlanta Dictating and Business Equipment Company (“Atlanta Dictating”), as a sole proprietorship. Eiberger also owns and controls ABP, Inc. (“ABP”) the other plaintiff in this action, which is incorporated under the laws of the State of Georgia, with its principal place of business at Atlanta.

Sony Corporation of America (“Sony”), the defendant herein, was incorporated in the State of New York on February 8,1960. It is the wholly owned American sales subsidiary of Sony Kabushiki Kaisha of Japan. Sony Kabuskiki Kaisha is one of the world’s leading corporations engaged in the development, manufacturer and sale of electronic equipment, instruments and devices. Sony has its principal place of business in this District.

Subject matter jurisdiction exists under §§ 4 and 16 of the Clayton Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 15, 26), and venue in this District is proper.

Eiberger is an experienced dealer in dictation machines and accessories, with Atlanta, Georgia serving as his primary base of operations. In early 1972, Eiberger was approached by Sony’s National Sales Manager and solicited to become Sony’s authorized dealer in Atlanta. In 1971, when Sony had introduced its line of electronic office dictation equipment to the United States market, it had done so by direct marketing *1279 from various regional sales offices. However, this direct marketing approach had not met with great success, and by 1972 Sony was in the process of replacing its direct sales force with a network of authorized Sony dealerships, franchised in various locations. Thus, in the spring of 1972 Eiberger’s sole proprietorship, Atlanta Dictating became Sony’s authorized dealer in the Atlanta metropolitan area. In 1973 Eiberger transferred his dictation equipment business to a newly organized corporation, ABP, and this new entity continued to concern itself principally with the sale and service of Sony dictating equipment.

Early in 1974, ABP began the re-sale of Sony equipment in wholesale quantities to Mr. Siegfried Williges, a former business associate of Eiberger, and a former Sony dealer in the Tampa, Florida area. While he had been an authorized Sony dealer, Williges had organized a web of dealers throughout Florida to whom he had given both sales and service training. When Williges was terminated as a Sony dealer in 1973, Sony enfranchised and began to deal directly with the sales network that Williges had established. With the machines supplied to him by Eiberger’s corporation, Williges was able to enter into competition with these authorized Sony dealers who had formerly been a part of his distribution network.

Faced with the specter of price competition created by Williges within their “territories,” at least two such authorized Sony dealers began to complain to Myron Trow-bridge, Sony’s Regional Sales Manager for the Southeast Region, and Leo Wyett, Sony’s General Manager for the same region. They urged Sony that the source of supply for Williges be cut off, thereby ending the threat posed by his price competition in the regions they served. Mr. Keith Brookins, the authorized Sony dealer for the Tampa area, sent letters to a number of other authorized dealers asking them to aid him in putting a stop to what he termed the “unethical sale of Sony dictating equipment in our area” (PL Exs. 16-18). Attached to each of these letters was a copy of the advertisements in which Mr. Williges had been offering Sony dictation equipment at discount prices.

Both Mr. Brookins and Mr. Peter Abdo, a Sony dealer in West Palm Beach, Florida, continued their chorus of complaints about their price cutting competitor to persons within Sony’s sales hierarchy. They began to report serial numbers of machines which they had not sold, but which had been found in the service of users located within their territories.

At this time Sony did not maintain records of serial numbers sufficient to associate a machine with the name of the seller, and therefore was unable to trace the source of Williges’ supply of Sony dictating equipment. Brookins and Abdo reported to Myron Trowbridge their suspicions that the source of Williges’ supply was his friend Eiberger. This led Mr. Trowbridge to question Belton Franks, manager of ABP, as to whether or not ABP was acting as a supplier for Williges. Franks denied the accusations posed by Trowbridge, although he knew that ABP was Williges’ principal source of supply.

Beginning in 1972 and continuing up until April of 1975, there was a rising tide of complaints by Sony retailers made to Michael P. Sehulhof, Sony’s Manager of Special Projects. These complaints centered upon the price competition offered by unauthorized Sony dealers within the territories delineated in Sony’s authorized dealer’s franchise agreements. As the complaints from dealers and Sony’s Regional Sales Managers reached a crescendo in the spring of 1975, Sony prepared to act to eliminate the difficulties caused by the sale of Sony dictation equipment to unauthorized dealers. Mr. Sehulhof then entered upon a new assignment as General Manager of Sony’s business products division, and Mr. Irwin Gross was hired as National Marketing Manager of this division.

On April 1, 1975, Sony presented all its dealers with a modified franchise agreement which made a significant change in the warranty fee program. Before the change, a selling dealer who was unable to service a machine sold because of geograph *1280 ic limitations would pay a local non-selling dealer actually rendering such warranty service, at an agreed price and on a voluntary basis. No payment was made by an extraterritorial dealer without first receiving reasonable assurance from the local dealer that the claimed services actually were rendered to the user. Following the new warranty program, all that the local non-selling dealer needed to do in order to collect warranty fees from an extraterritorial selling dealer was to send to Sony the serial number of a dictating machine found within his territory. On May 1, 1975 record keeping was begun by Sony of the serial numbers of the machines sold to each dealer, so that each could be traced readily to the selling dealer or point of origin. Once an extraterritorial machine had been traced back to its source by Sony, that dealer’s account with Sony was debited in an amount commensurate with a predetermined warranty fee schedule which was made a part of each dealer’s franchise agreement.

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459 F. Supp. 1276, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eiberger-v-sony-corp-of-america-nysd-1978.