S.F. Print Media Co. v. The Hearst Corp.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 2020
DocketA152930
StatusPublished

This text of S.F. Print Media Co. v. The Hearst Corp. (S.F. Print Media Co. v. The Hearst Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.F. Print Media Co. v. The Hearst Corp., (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 1/31/20 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

SAN FRANCISCO PRINT MEDIA COMPANY, Plaintiff and Appellant, A152930

v. (City & County of San Francisco THE HEARST CORPORATION et al., Super. Ct. No. CGC13532369) Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiff San Francisco Print Media Company, owner of the San Francisco Examiner (the Examiner), sued the corporate owner, a subsidiary, and employees of the San Francisco Chronicle (the Chronicle), claiming, in sum, that defendants sold a certain type of print advertising in the Chronicle at prices that violated California’s Unfair Practices Act (UPA, Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17000 et seq.1) and Unfair Competition Law (UCL, § 17200 et seq.). Plaintiff now appeals from judgment after the trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. This case turns in part on the application of Sargon Enterprises, Inc. v. University of Southern California (2012) 55 Cal.4th 747 (Sargon), which sets out standards concerning the admissibility of expert opinion testimony. In the published portion of this decision, we conclude the trial court properly granted summary judgment as to plaintiff’s cause of action for below-cost sales under the UPA (§ 17043) after granting defendants’

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts B, C, and D of the Discussion. 1 Unless otherwise stated, subsequent statutory references are to the Business and Professions Code.

1 Sargon motion and excluding the opinion of plaintiff’s expert on costs. Among other things, plaintiff had disclaimed reliance on specific transactions to prove the Chronicle’s alleged underpricing of its print advertising, leaving only the aggregate cost analysis prepared by that expert to establish the occurrence of alleged below-cost sales. As the trial court correctly determined, however, the record established that plaintiff’s expert lacked the foundational knowledge to conduct the requisite cost analysis and that he based his analysis on another individual’s non-UPA-related pricing analysis without understanding its foundations, such as some of the included cost components. In the unpublished portion of this decision, we conclude summary judgment was properly granted as to plaintiff’s cause of action for unlawful use or sale of loss leaders under the UPA (§ 17044) because plaintiff failed to identify the loss leader sales on which this claim was based. We further conclude in the unpublished portion that the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment on plaintiff’s cause of action for secret and unearned discounts under the UPA (§ 17045) and its UCL cause of action. The judgment is affirmed. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Plaintiff’s Lawsuit In June 2013, plaintiff filed its original complaint against the Chronicle’s corporate owner and a subsidiary, Hearst Corporation and Hearst Communications, Inc., and three Chronicle employees. The operative third amended complaint alleged three causes of action under the UPA: below-cost sales (§ 17043); unlawful use or sale of loss leaders (§ 17044); and secret and unearned discounts (§ 17045). The complaint also alleged defendants violated the UCL (§ 17200) by its conduct violating the UPA. Plaintiff sought damages and injunctive relief. The conduct underlying all these causes of action was, in essence, the Chronicle’s alleged underpricing of its full-run run-of-press print advertising2 beginning in 2011,

2 “Run-of-press” means print display advertisements in a newspaper, as opposed to newspaper inserts or classified advertisements, or advertisements in other print media (such as magazines). “Full run” means the advertisements appearing in the generally

2 when plaintiff bought the Examiner. During the course of the litigation, defendants had a protracted discovery dispute with plaintiff, trying to ascertain the specific advertisers at issue in the case. Then, in a December 2016 joint case management statement, plaintiff asserted its expert, Richard Eichmann, would testify about “costs, causation, and damages” by analyzing all of the Chronicle’s print advertising transactions, not just particular transactions, to show the Chronicle sold below cost, and by conducting a statistical analysis to show the economic injury caused by the Chronicle’s below-cost pricing and to calculate the Examiner’s estimated lost profits. In light of Eichmann’s methodology, plaintiff represented that defendants’ proposed depositions of particular advertisers were unnecessary and irrelevant. In the same joint case management statement, defendants responded, based on plaintiff’s representations, that they did not intend to depose the hundreds of advertisers they initially thought they would. Defendants said that after completing expert discovery, they would file a Sargon motion challenging the admissibility of Eichmann’s expert opinion testimony and a summary judgment motion. Before discussing these motions, we summarize Eichmann’s expert evidence. B. Plaintiff’s Expert, Richard Eichmann Plaintiff’s expert, Eichmann, an economist and economic consultant, authored his initial report in November 2016. As relevant here, Eichmann first calculated the Chronicle’s “fully allocated cost”3 for print advertising. Then comparing that amount to

distributed newspaper, as opposed to advertisements that are “part run” or “zoned” to appear only in “zoned” editions of the newspaper. The record reflects that plaintiff asserted the only product at issue in this case was full-run run-of-press (FRROP) print advertising. For the sake of brevity, we will refer to the FRROP print advertising simply as “print advertising.” 3 This will be discussed further below, but for context we note here the occurrence of a below-cost sale is an element of the section 17043 and section 17044 causes of action (CACI Nos. 3301 & 3302), and the UPA employs a “fully allocated cost” standard to determine if a sale is below cost. (Turnbull & Turnbull v. ARA Transportation, Inc. (1990) 219 Cal.App.3d 811, 819–820 (Turnbull).) “The concept of fully allocated cost has been equated with average total cost, which ‘reflects that portion of the firm’s total

3 what he calculated was the average price paid for print advertising in the Chronicle, he concluded that a majority of the Chronicle’s advertising customers paid below cost for a majority of advertising between 2011 and 2015. Second, Eichmann conducted a regression analysis using information about print advertising sales from the two newspapers, devising an equation to statistically estimate the relationship between the Examiner’s advertising revenue with its own print advertising prices and the Chronicle’s print advertising prices (also referred to as the own-price elasticity of demand and cross- price elasticity of demand, respectively). With these elasticity estimates derived from the regression analysis, Eichmann opined that the Examiner lost millions of dollars in profits from 2012 onward due to the Chronicle’s below-cost pricing. Third, Eichmann purported to corroborate the results of his regression analysis with a “yardstick” analysis that estimated what the Examiner’s print advertising revenue would have been had it realized nationwide industry growth rates for newspaper advertising revenue. Defense expert Daniel Rubinfeld filed a report criticizing Eichmann’s analyses on numerous grounds. Conceding the validity of Rubinfeld’s criticism that he used incorrect data in his regression analysis, Eichmann submitted a supplemental report in April 2017 in which he updated his regression analysis and re-evaluated damages.

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