OPA (Overseas Publishing Ass'n) Amsterdam BV v. American Institute of Physics

973 F. Supp. 414, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12842, 1997 WL 528086
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 26, 1997
Docket93 Civ. 6656 LBS
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 973 F. Supp. 414 (OPA (Overseas Publishing Ass'n) Amsterdam BV v. American Institute of Physics) 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.

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OPA (Overseas Publishing Ass'n) Amsterdam BV v. American Institute of Physics, 973 F. Supp. 414, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12842, 1997 WL 528086 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

SAND, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, affiliated commercial pubhshers of scientific journals, brought this action against defendants, not-for-profit physics societies. Plaintiffs seek to enjoin defendants from claiming in promotional materials that studies show defendants’ physics publications, as measured by cost per printed character or cost per citation received within a particular timeframe, to be more “cost-effective” or “better bargains” than those pubhshed by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs claim primarily that the studies rehed upon by defendants *416 fail to measure cost-effectiveness, making the promotions literally false representations of fact, in violation of Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Some nine years after the original publication of the challenged material, and after parallel proceedings in three different foreign jurisdictions, two prior published opinions by this court, and a seven-day bench trial, the Court makes the following findings of fact and reaches the following conclusions of law.

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

Plaintiffs OPA (Overseas Publishing Association) Amsterdam BV, Harwood Academic Publishers GMBH, and Gordon and Breach Science Publishers S.A. (collectively, “Gordon and Breach” or “G & B”), commonly known as the Gordon and Breach Publishing Group, are commercial publishers of over 300 journals in the fields of the physical and social sciences, arts and business. Among plaintiffs’ publications are forty-six physics journals.

Defendant the American Institute of Physics (“AIP”) is an umbrella organization of not-for-profit physics societies, including defendant the American Physical Society (“APS”). Both defendants publish physics journals; APS’s 1996 revenues from publishing were $24 million, while AIP’s 1995 publishing revenues were $38 million. Among defendants’ publications are the Bulletin of the American Physical Society and AIP’s Physics Today, a monthly magazine distributed to all members of AIP or its member societies.

A. The Barschall Articles

Beginning in the 1980’s, academic journal subscription prices began to increase at a rapid pace. (Trial Tr. 751, 995; Pl.Ex. 77) As a result, libraries — the primary subscribers to academic journals — were forced to cut back on their subscriptions, with a twofold effect: competition within the scientific journal industry, in which the top 500 journals are a $2.3 billion-per-year business (Trial Tr. 756), became more aggressive, and a cycle of price increases ensued as publishers were compelled to recover publication costs from fewer subscribers, which in turn led to higher prices that caused more subscriptions to be dropped.

The conflict between the parties began in December 1986, when Henry H. Barschall, a physicist at the University of Wisconsin and a member of both an AIP publishing committee and the AIP Governing Board, published an article entitled “The Cost of Physics Journals” (the “1986 Article”) in Physics Today. (Pl.Ex. 1) Beginning with the premise that “[sjcience libraries all over the United States face serious financial problems associated with the increased costs of journals,” (id.), the 1986 Article reported a study in which Barschall used an averaging method to determine the number of characters per page of a journal, which was then multiplied by the number of pages published by the journal in that year. The resulting figure was divided into the journal’s annual subscription price and multiplied by 1,000 to arrive at a cost-per-thousand-characters (“cost/kilocharacter”) figure. Barschall then picked “at random one or two physics journals published by each of the major physics publishers,” and presented them in tabular form sorted by cosVkilocharacter. (Id.)

Defendants’ publications fared significantly better in the study than those of plaintiffs. The four journals published by defendants and listed in the table were the four highest-scoring journals, with costs ranging from 0.7 to 1.6 cents per thousand characters, while Particle Accelerators, the sole G & B physics journal listed in the table, was ranked last with a cost of 31 cents per thousand characters. While the article listed various factors which might account for the differences among some of the journals, it concluded by suggesting that libraries consider the low cost/kilocharacter of AIP and APS journals when making purchase decisions:

Libraries benefit greatly from the low cost per printed word of journals published by AIP and its member societies. These journals also have larger circulations and wider readerships than commercial journals ____As chairman of our physics department’s library advisory committee, I have the unpleasant task of advising our librarian on which journal subscriptions to cancel. Obviously the most important con *417 siderations are how many people use the journal and whether the journal is available elsewhere on the campus. But I also look at cost, and my opinion is influenced not only by the price of the journal but also by the price per printed word.

(Id.)

Following publication, AIP and APS distributed the study promotionally. Defendants mailed reprints of the article to librarians, timed to be received just before renewal bills for subscriptions to defendants’ journals. APS’s cover letter accompanying the reprint stated that, “[ujsing the proper quantitative measure — the cost per published character (rather than the cost per annual subscription) — Barschall demonstrates most convincingly that the journals of The American Physical Society (and the American Institute of Physics) are a great bargain compared to other physics journals.” (Pl.Ex. 33) AIP’s cover letter stated that Barschall’s study was “based on an accurate quantitative measure: the cost per published character, rather than the cost per subscription. Barschall demonstrates that the journals of the American Physical Society and of the American Institute of Physics are a great bargain compared to other physics journals.” (Pl.Ex. 34) Meanwhile, when it learned about the survey, Gordon and Breach wrote to Barschall and APS — although Physics Today is an AIP publication — complaining that there were various errors in the survey and requesting that G & B be eliminated from any future such surveys (Pl.Ex. 21). AIP disputes receiving the misaddressed letter (Havens Dep. 46-47), but the Court need not resolve the issue as nothing material turns upon it.

In 1988 Barschall undertook a more comprehensive survey (the “Barschall Study” or “Barschall’s study”) of over 200 physics journals, including 11 of the 24 physics journals then published by G & B. This survey measured journals not only by cost/kilocharacter, but also by “impact factor.” The latter measure was taken from the 1986 Science Citation Index published by the Institute for Scientific Information (“ISI”), which defined a journal’s impact as the average number of citations in 1986 to articles published in that journal in 1984 and 1985.

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973 F. Supp. 414, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12842, 1997 WL 528086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opa-overseas-publishing-assn-amsterdam-bv-v-american-institute-of-nysd-1997.