Kenneth Lehrman v. Gulf Oil Corporation

500 F.2d 659
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1974
Docket73-2822
StatusPublished
Cited by173 cases

This text of 500 F.2d 659 (Kenneth Lehrman v. Gulf Oil Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenneth Lehrman v. Gulf Oil Corporation, 500 F.2d 659 (5th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

GEWIN, Circuit Judge:

I

This is the second appeal in this case, and we are now concerned only with the issue of damages. The first appeal arose out of a treble damage antitrust action filed by Mr. Kenneth Lehrman under Section 1 of the Sherman Act 1 against the Gulf Oil “Corporation (Gulf) alleging that Gulf’s complicated system of setting wholesale prices for its gasoline was used as a mechanism for fixing the retail prices at which station operators like Lehrman resold the gasoline. He alleged that these illegal pricing policies drove him out of his service station business in Mart, Texas, by making it impossible for him to compete with the prices charged by other stations in his area. 2 After the initial jury trial a verdict was returned in Lehrman’s favor in the amount of $60,000 in compensatory damages, but the district court set aside this verdict, reduced the award, and entered a judgment for Lehrman for the sum of $21,000-$63,000 trebled.

Gulf appealed to this court 3 raising the questions of jurisdiction and liability. Both parties to the previous appeal complained of the district court’s treatment of the damages assessed against Gulf. This court concluded that the dis *662 trict court did not lack subject matter jurisdiction and that Gulf was indeed liable for an antitrust violation. We found it necessary, however, to remand the cause for further proceedings restricted to the question of the proper measure of Lehrman’s damages. Although our opinion emphasized the principle that courts are “to take a charitable view of the difficulties of proving damages in a case when a treble-damage plaintiff must try to prove what would have accrued to him in the absence of the defendant’s anticompetitive practice,” it was concluded that “we must at least insist upon ‘a just and reasonable estimate of the damage based on reasonable data.’ ” 4

Specifically, on the first appeal this court found that there should have been an allowance in the original jury verdict for mitigation of Lehrman’s damages by the amount of his earnings in his current line of work. 5 ^Moreover, it was determined that the district court’s remit-titur was inappropriate. Without noting any other specific criticism of the evidence on damages we offered the following observations in the concluding portion of the opinion:

At the new trial, Lehrman may introduce additional evidence to provide the jury with a better “yardstick” to measure Lehrman’s losses. There may be additional evidence to clarify the possible length of Lehrman’s future tenure in the station and therefore the appropriate duration of future profits. Additional evidence will likely be necessary to provide some measure of the deduction from Lehrman’s damages which must be attributed to the present and future earning capacity he now has which he would not have enjoyed had he continued to look chiefly to the station for his income and to devote most of his time to its operation.

With our former opinion as a guide the case was retried on the damage issue only. Lehrman attempted to remedy the specially enumerated defect in his prior proof by introducing evidence of his alternative sources of income. A second jury returned a verdict for $40,000 and a treble damage judgment of $120,000 was entered by the court. Gulf has appealed again, and today we must decide whether Mr. Lehrman’s efforts on retrial to prove his damages comply with standards prescribed by our previous opinion and by sound precedent. We feel that they do and affirm.

II

Before addressing Gulf’s contentions, however, we should briefly discuss the “law of the case” doctrine which plays an important role in subsequent appeals. This laudable and self-imposed 6 restriction is grounded upon the sound public policy that litigation must come to an end. An appellate court cannot efficiently perform its duty to provide expeditious justice to all “if a question, once considered and decided by it were to be litigated anew in the same case upon any and every subsequent appeal.” 7 Not only does the doctrine promote judicial efficiency but it also discourages “panel shopping” at the circuit level, for in today’s climate it is most likely that a different panel will hear subsequent appeals. 8

Nevertheless, there are important boundaries to the scope of the doctrine. *663 In the federal courts, for example, the law of the ease does not carry the same consequences as the rule of res judicata; it does not preclude a second review if considerations of substantial justice warrant it. 9 More important to the instant case is the limitation that the doctrine does not include all questions which were present in a case and which might have been decided but were not. 10 As a general rule if the issues were decided, either expressly or by necessary implication, those determinations of law will be binding on remand and on a subsequent appeal. 11

Ill

Gulf has massed a repetitive and caustic assault upon Lehrman’s case, but its contentions can be distilled into three broad categories; (1) improper jury instructions; (2) the admission of allegedly improper evidence, particularly “yardstick” evidence; (3) the allegedly undue speculation on which the jury verdict is based. The jury instructions are asserted to be deficient in four respects: (1) going concern value should be the only measure of damages, not future profits; (2) the jury should be instructed on the present value concept; (3) the charge allowed the jury to award dupli-cative damages; (4) an instruction on treble damages should have been given.

The first of these assertions— inappropriateness of future profits as a measure of damages — is clearly without merit. Initially, we feel that the law of the case has been clearly established hete. Gulf objected to the use of future profits on the first appeal but we rejected the challenge and stated:

Gulf raises several objections to the damage calculation. First, it objects to the use of future profits as a measure of Lehrman’s damages because, it contends that allowing Lehrman to recover for future profits would enable a proprietor who has been the victim of a single anticompetitive practice to walk away from his business and collect damages for future profits despite the possibility that the business might still be operated successfully. Gulf stresses that the cases which have allowed future profits as a measure of antitrust damages have been eases involving refusals to deal, or cancellation of leases, both of which practices rendered it impossible for the proprietor who had been damaged to continue in business.

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500 F.2d 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-lehrman-v-gulf-oil-corporation-ca5-1974.