Has there ever been a price-fixing case
in which the alleged conspirators agreed to take less money for
their product and simultaneously up their production and boost
competition? The answer to that question may determine the
success of the Justice Department's e-books antitrust suit
against Apple and the two publishers that have not agreed to
settle DOJ's civil charges.
On Friday, Apple and three publishers filed reply briefs in
their effort to win dismissal of the private antitrust class action that parallels the Antitrust Division's case. Those
filings, coming two days after the government brought suit,
offer good hints at how defense lawyers for Apple and the
publishers will counter the Justice Department's allegations.
(Interestingly, Hachette and Harper Collins -- the two
publishers that have reached a tentative $52 million settlement
with 16 state Attorneys General -- did not sign the joint
publishers' motion, which suggests that they may argue their AG
deal resolves the class action plaintiffs' damages claims.)
The essence of the government's case (as well as the private
class action) is that the publishers regarded Apple's entry into
the e-books market as a chance to break Amazon's 90-percent
monopoly. As part of that effort, the publishers al l egedly
conspired with Apple to change the e-books model from the
wholesale pricing Amazon insisted upon to so-called "agency
pricing," in which publishers set prices and Apple received a
commission for every e-book it sold. Both the class action and
the government suit assert that Apple and the publishers engaged
in what's known as "per se" price-fixing, which means that
plaintiffs must only prove there was a conspiracy to restrain
competition and raise prices. The Justice Department and private
plaintiffs claim the proof of the conspiracy is the rise in
e-book prices after the publishers all signed agency-pricing
deals with Apple, from $9.99 to $12.99 or $14.99 for new titles.
But the publishers have long argued that the price-fixing
evidence doesn't add up, since they actually make less money per
book through Apple's agency model than through wholesale
pricing, in which they sold books directly to Amazon and
received a percentage of that sale price. Before Amazon's e-book
reader, the Kindle, faced competition from the iPad and Barnes &
Noble's Nook, the publishers assert, Amazon regarded e-books as
a loss leader to drive Kindle sales, so it was willing to pay
relatively high prices to publishers. Nevertheless, according to
the 24-page brief filed Friday by Penguin, Macmillan, and Simon
& Schuster, the publishers were all so concerned about Amazon's
stranglehold on the e-books industry -- and the risks that
monopoly posed for sales of both e-books and traditional books
-- that they independently signed on with Apple. Independent
decisions, even in parallel, don't constitute price-fixing, the
publishers contend.
The publishers' motion to dismiss the class action relied
heavily on the U.S. Supreme Court's 2007 ruling, Bell Atlantic v. Twombly, which held that antitrust plaintiffs must show
specific, detailed evidence of a conspiracy. That may be a less
appealing defense against the Justice Department's complaint,
which includes the sort of specific allegations of meetings and
e-mails that Twombly demands. Instead, when Apple and the
publishers move to dismiss the government's suit, I'll expect to
see an argument Apple raised in the 20-page brief its lawyers at
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher filed Friday in the class action. Apple
asserted that the e-book case should be considered under the
"rule of reason" standard articulated in the U.S. Supreme
Court's 2007 ruling Leegin Creative Leather v. PSKS. Under the
rule of reason, as opposed to a per se price-fixing case, the
plaintiffs have to prove the alleged conspiracy impacted the
market.
In Leegin, the Supreme Court held that only price restraints
that restrict competition and decrease output are per se illegal
under the Sherman Act, and courts may only find per se
illegality when they "have had considerable experience with the
type of restraint at issue." Apple contended that the e-book
class action plaintiffs can't meet the rule of reason standard
because Apple didn't have the market power to insist on higher
prices and e-book sales soared after Apple entered the market.
"Apple simply entered a market it never competed in, using
bargained-for agreements that did not set prices or limit output
at all," the brief said. "Prices cannot be divorced from output,
legally or economically, and it is beyond dispute that Apple's
entry with the iPad and iBookstore was expected to, and did,
'prompt a surge in eBook purchasing.'"
Though Apple emphasized that it can't be the hub of a
price-fixing conspiracy through individual agreements with
publishers -- and thus the per se rule can't apply to its
conduct -- the publishers also have a strong argument that no
court has the requisite "considerable experience" with the kind
of price-fixing conspiracy alleged in the e-books case to apply
the per se standard. The publishers could argue that aside from
the higher prices consumers now pay for e-books, the e-books
scenario lacks classic indicators of price-fixing, such as more
money for members of the conspiracy, less competition, and
reduced output for purchasers. If the defendants persuade U.S.
District Judge Denise Cote of Manhattan federal court, who is
overseeing all of the e-books litigation, to adopt the rule of
reason standard and consider the marketplace impact of the
alleged conspiracy, they are sure to point out that increased
competition in the e-books market has led to drastically lower
prices for e-readers like the Kindle and the Nook, as well as
many more titles becoming available.
Apple is represented in the Justice Department case by
O'Melveny & Myers. On Friday's brief for the publishers are
Sidley Austin for Macmillan; Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld for
Penguin; and Weil, Gotshal & Manges, Proskauer Rose, and the Law
Office of Martha E. Gifford for Simon & Shuster. Harper Collins,
which did not join the publishers' reply brief and has settled
both the Justice Department and state AG cases, is represented
by Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in all of the e-books
litigation. Hachette, which has also settled with DOJ and the
AGs, has Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer.
(Reporting by Alison Frankel)
Follow us on Twitter: @AlisonFrankel, @ReutersLegal