Reed Brothers, Inc. v. Monsanto Company

525 F.2d 486
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1976
Docket74--1695
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 525 F.2d 486 (Reed Brothers, Inc. v. Monsanto Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed Brothers, Inc. v. Monsanto Company, 525 F.2d 486 (8th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLARK.

Appellant, Reed Brothers, Inc. (Reed), is a wholesaler of agricultural products located in Winterset, Iowa. On July 31, 1972, it brought this action for damages in the Southern District of Iowa pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 15, claiming that Monsanto Company — a manufacturer of various products, including agricultural herbicides, based in St. Louis, Missouri, had violated the Sherman Act by engaging in unlawful territorial and customer restraints. On May 24, 1974, a jury verdict of $59,990.04 was returned in favor of Reed, but on August 9, 1974, upon motion of Monsanto, the district court entered judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial, principally on the grounds of insufficient evidence. We reverse.

*489 I.

In 1962, Reed became a “contract distributor” of Monsanto’s pre-emergent corn and soybean herbicides known as Lasso and Ramrod, which entitled it to buy directly from Monsanto at distributor prices. In the years 1966 and 1967, Reed was assigned a seven-county “area of primary responsibility” in Iowa pursuant to the provisions of Monsanto’s standard form contract which stated:

While nothing in this Agreement shall restrict the territory within which Distributor shall be free to distribute the Goods, Distributor’s area of primary responsibility for distribution of each of the Goods or groups of Goods shall be as defined in Exhibit A. * * *
Distributor shall exert its best efforts to exploit fully the potential markets for the Goods in the assigned areas.

Though it operated two retail outlets in Iowa for direct sales to farmers, most of Reed’s sales were to dealers rather than users and almost exclusively outside of its “area of primary responsibility.” For example, during crop year 1968 — its last year as a contract distributor — Reed ordered a total of 750,000 pounds of Ramrod, but sold less than 3,000 pounds of it to dealers within the seven-county area. At trial, it was estimated by Monsanto that the potential market for herbicides in Reed’s seven-county assigned area was some 6 million pounds. Some 15 distributors had “areas of primary responsibility” which overlapped Reed’s, but appellant was one of only two distributors headquartered in that area of Iowa. Nevertheless, in 1968, Reed sold a mere $1,458 worth of herbicides to four out of the 25 dealers located in that area.

In the fall of 1968, at the expiration of Reed’s last annual distributorship contract, Monsanto declined to renew the contract, thus terminating Reed as a distributor. Though it does not appear that a written explanation of Reed’s termination was provided at that time, Monsanto later answered one of Reed’s pre-trial interrogatories as follows:

The reason for not renewing plaintiff’s distributor contract with Monsanto was plaintiff’s inherent and demonstrated inability or refusal to organize and operate the distributorship in a manner which would enable it to adequately and properly develop and maintain the dealer market potential in its area of responsibility.

A year earlier, in September of 1967, Monsanto had sent letters to all distributors, informing them that it would use six criteria to evaluate them for future renewals. Specifically Reed was told that its 1968 sales performance would be measured against the following standard:

6. Can the Distributor be expected to exploit fully the potential markets for the Goods in the Distributor’s area of primary responsibility?

Significantly, Fred Reed, Jr., who manages the herbicide business for appellant, made the following admission at trial on direct examination:

Q. So that, Mr. Reed, reviewing those six criteria that Monsanto Company sent out to you when they gave you that contract, based upon what you have now testified to, which criteria, if any, did you not fulfill?
A. I would say No. 6.

From this record, it seems clear that Reed was terminated solely because of Monsanto’s justifiable dissatisfaction with Reed’s sales performance within the seven-county area. There is no evidence to suggest that Monsanto took action against Reed for its extra-territorial sales. Although Fred Reed, Jr., estimated at trial that appellant had lost some $347,500 in net profits for the period 1969 to 1973 due to the loss of its distributorship, it cannot be said that this is an injury which results from Monsanto’s efforts to enforce territorial restrictions. A different situation, however, exists in regard to the post-termination period.

Following its termination in 1968, Reed continued to sell Monsanto products to dealers throughout the Midwest, but was by necessity forced to turn to other distributors for its source of sup *490 ply. Beginning in 1969, Reed took to operating as a “discounter” or wholesaler, buying from distributors at a high-volume discount and selling to retailers or other wholesalers over the telephone with little overhead expense, working with low margins of profit, between two and four percent. In the 1969, 1970, and 1971 crop years, Reed purchased large quantities of Monsanto herbicides from various Monsanto distributors: John Mulvihill of Bird Island, Minnesota; Dick Chadima of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Laverty Sprayers Co. of Indianola, Iowa; and John Anderson of Fremont, Nebraska. In 1971, for example, Reed purchased some $1.1 millions worth of Monsanto products from Anderson, and Reed’s total 1971 Monsanto sales amounted to $1.25 million. Two policy decisions by Monsanto, however, conjoined to profoundly affect Reed’s future .business.

In 1969, Monsanto implemented a new shipping and pick-up policy which provided that: (1) orders for shipment of herbicides would thereafter be accepted for prepaid delivery only for destinations within the ordering distributor’s “area of primary responsibility,” and (2) orders for pick-up of herbicides would thereafter be accepted only at Monsanto warehouses within the ordering distributor’s assigned territory. The obvious effect of this change in Monsanto’s prior policies was to increase the distributor’s transportation costs for sales outside his assigned territory, thus making it financially unattractive for the distributor to make such sales.

Additionally Monsanto put into operation in 1972 a voluntary compliance system, denominated the “Dealer Compensation Program,” under which rebates were paid to distributors on a per unit basis for all Monsanto herbicides sold directly from contract distributor to retail dealer. 1 Cooperating distributors received no rebates for sales to wholesalers, such as Reed, even though the latter’s sales were directly to dealers. The rebates varied in rate from product to product and were paid for the distributor’s participation in certain “activities.” In its brief, Monsanto stated that the purpose of the program was “to help cover the higher costs incurred by distributors who employ the extra salesmen needed to aggressively penetrate the dealer markets.” Its direct effect was simply to eliminate wholesalers and discounters. A chart, showing the various activities and' the rates for two of Monsanto’s herbicide products, follows:

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