Horst A. Eiberger, D/B/A Atlanta Dictating and Business Equipment Co., and Abp, Inc. v. Sony Corporation of America

622 F.2d 1068, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17908
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 1980
Docket128, Docket 78-7625
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 622 F.2d 1068 (Horst A. Eiberger, D/B/A Atlanta Dictating and Business Equipment Co., and Abp, Inc. v. Sony Corporation of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horst A. Eiberger, D/B/A Atlanta Dictating and Business Equipment Co., and Abp, Inc. v. Sony Corporation of America, 622 F.2d 1068, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17908 (2d Cir. 1980).

Opinion

*1070 KEARSE, Circuit Judge:

Sony Corporation of America (“Sonam”), the defendant below, appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Charles L. Brieant, Judge, awarding $153,-416.05 in damages to plaintiffs Horst A. Eiberger, sole proprietor of Atlanta Dictating and Business Equipment Co., and ABP, Inc., Eiberger’s wholly-owned corporation (hereinafter collectively referred to as “ABP”) for injury resulting from violation of the antitrust laws by Sonam. ABP, an authorized dealer of Sony office dictation equipment from 1972 until 1976, charged that Sonam’s exaction of “warranty fees” for extraterritorial sales and its termination of the ABP dealership because of ABP’s refusal to pay such fees, violated § 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 (1976). After a bench trial the district court found that Sonam’s warranty fee system amounted to a vertical territorial restriction on resale by Sony dealers, which unreasonably restrained trade in violation of § 1, and also found that the system was implemented as a result of Sonam’s collaboration with a horizontal conspiracy among other Sony dealers, which was per se unlawful under § 1-

On appeal, Sonam challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying the district court’s determinations of liability, the appropriateness of the legal theories applied, and the calculation of ABP’s damages. We affirm the district court’s determination of liability on the ground that Sonam’s warranty fee system constituted an unreasonable vertical restraint of trade, but remand because we conclude that the district court’s findings as to damages are not fully supported by the record.

I

A. Sonam’s Dealer Network and the Warranty Fee System Prior to 1975

Sonam is the wholly-owned American sales subsidiary of Sony Kabushiki Kaisha of Japan, a leading manufacturer of electronic equipment, instruments and devices. In 1971, Sonam introduced Sony’s line of electronic office dictation equipment to the United States. Initially, Sonam sold this dictation equipment directly to consumers, through regional sales offices. This method of distribution was quickly abandoned in favor of a network of authorized Sony retail dealerships, franchised in various locations. By 1975, Sonam had climbed to fifth place among the more than twenty manufacturers of office dictation equipment, with a national market share of 12%; the top five manufacturers accounted for 96% of sales. A Sony handbook stated that Sonam was the fastest growing of all “input word processing equipment” companies and that sales were expected to increase.

Sonam entered into identical written contracts with all of its dealers. Each agreement related to a specified geographical area and provided that the dealer would “primarily devote and otherwise concentrate its operations in the retail sale” of Sony products in that area. The agreement stated that it was not intended to restrict dealers to sales within their territories and that the territories covered by the franchise were non-exclusive. 1

Sonam provided to consumer-purchasers of its dictation machines a warranty offering free repair service for 90 days, and free parts replacement for one year, from the date of sale. The dealership agreement imposed on the dealer responsibility for providing required warranty service on all *1071 Sony machines that he sold. 2 In addition, it was generally expected (although not embodied in the dealership agreement until April 1975) that a dealer would provide his customers with instruction in the proper use of the equipment. Sonam referred to this instruction service as “installation.” Sonam did not specifically compensate its dealers for providing warranty service or “installation,” but rather expected that its dealers would cover these costs out of the margin between their purchase price and Sonam’s suggested list price.

Prior to April 1975 the dealership agreement also allowed a selling dealer to transfer warranty responsibilities to another dealer, by paying the latter a fee in accordance with a schedule of “warranty fees” attached to the agreement. The latter dealer, when the selling dealer requested and made the proper payment, was required to “accept complete responsibility for” providing warranty service on machines he did not sell. 3 It was never certain that the non-selling dealer would actually have to perform any warranty service; but if the selling dealer made the request and paid the scheduled fee, the non-selling dealer was responsible for such warranty service as might be required. This system facilitated extraterritorial sales by enabling a selling dealer to transfer warranty responsibility to a dealer closer to the customer. It was not uncommon for a selling dealer to ship the equipment to the other dealer rather than directly to the customer, or to request the other dealer to deliver out of his own stock, so that the latter dealer would not only be available to provide warranty service, but could provide “installation” service as well. During this period, a selling dealer was not required to pay a fee merely because he sold equipment in the territory of another Sony dealer. The seller could elect to perform warranty and “installation” services on these sales himself. If he did so, there was no reason for him to make a request or to pay any fee to the local dealer. Sonam itself was not formally involved in transactions under this system.

B. ABP’s Activities and Dealer Reaction to Them

For some years prior to 1972, Eiberger had been an experienced dealer in dictation equipment, operating primarily in Atlanta, Georgia. In the spring of 1972, Eiberger’s sole proprietorship, Atlanta Dictating and Business Equipment Co., became Sony’s authorized dealer in the Atlanta metropolitan area. In 1973, Eiberger transferred this dealership to his wholly-owned corporation, ABP. Sales of Sony dictation equipment soon accounted for roughly half of ABP’s business.

In early 1974, ABP began to sell Sony dictation machines, in wholesale quantities, to Seigfried Williges, who was a former business associate of Eiberger and who had himself been an authorized Sony dealer in the Tampa, Florida area until 1973. As an authorized dealer, Williges had a network of sub-dealers throughout Florida, to whom he had given both sales and service training. After it terminated Williges’ dealership in 1973, Sonam had enfranchised and begun to deal directly with the sub-dealers in the network established by Williges. In 1974 when Williges began to obtain Sony equipment from ABP, he entered into competition with the dealers from his old network. He advertised and sold Sony machines at prices substantially below the list prices offered by the authorized dealers, and established a new network of sub-dealers, to whom he provided service training, *1072 and through whom he sold Sony dictation machines.

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Bluebook (online)
622 F.2d 1068, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 17908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horst-a-eiberger-dba-atlanta-dictating-and-business-equipment-co-and-ca2-1980.