84 / Journal of Marketing, Winter 1980
Transcription
84 / Journal of Marketing, Winter 1980
companies had violated the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act which established minimum federal standards for consumerproduct warranties. One firm, marketing mobile homes primarily in Louisiana, designated its warranty as a "Full One-Year Limited Warranty." The FTC complaint charged that such working could mislead consumers about the limited protection. What is a "full" warranty? Under a "full" warranty, a consumer-product manufacturer must repair the product free, within a reasonable time, and must not require the buyer to do anything unreasonable in getting the repairs. Also, the manufacturer must give the buyer a new product, or offer a refund, if the original item has not been repaired after a fair number of attempts. A warranty which specifies any less protection must be designated a "limited" warranty. According to the complaint, Madison based in California, provided a warranty which misrepresented that buyers have no implied warranty rights under state law. In fact, as seen in the Renault case buyers automatically have such rights under state law. The seller firm has agreed to inform buyers about their rights under implied warranties. The letter which the company must send explains that buyers have a warranty of "merchantability," which means that the home must be fit to live in and also a warranty of "fitness for a special purpose." The second warranty means that the homes must live up to specific claims, if made by the seller, and relied on by the buyer in making the purchase. Another complaint cites Madison for improperly stating that the buyers had to return a registration card to the company in order to be entitled to warranty protection. This is not a requirement. Therefore, the Madison letter must state that warranty service will be provided if the buyer can show "any reasonable proof of purchase or delivery date." The two firms have pledged that their warranties will be correct in the future. 3.0 REGULATION OF PRICE COMPETITION 3.1 Price Discrimination Purdy Mobile Homes, Inc. v. Champion Home Builders Co. and Tamarack Homes, CCH H 62,620 (CA-9, April 1979); BNA ATRR No. 913 (May 10. 1979), A-20. [Tower] Does a mobile home manufacturer's refusal to make all of its mobile home lines available to a dealer amount to "delivery discrimination" in violation of Section 2{e) of the Robinson-Patman Act? The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled negatively in this case involving a unique attempt on the part of the plaintiffs lawyer to win a judgment under the Robinson-Patman Act. Purdy Mobile Homes brought this action against Champion Home Builders and its subsidiary alleging violations of both state and federal statutes. The district court ruled in Champion's favor on all charges. The only issue involved in this appellate case related to alleged discriminatory behavior on the part of Champion. Purdy's lawyers brought the action under Section 2(e) of the Robinson-Patman Act which deals with discriminatory offerings of promotional services and facilities. Purdy asserted that Champion engaged in "multiple branding" by placing different brand names on three nearly identical lines of mobile homes, and that Champion's refusal to sell two of the brands to Purdy while selling them to other franchisees constituted "delivery discrimination." 84 / Journal of Marketing, Winter 1980 In making its case. Purdy relied on the Contex-Winston Co. case (477 F. 2d 585 [1971]) to support its contention of "delivery discrimination." In Contex-Winston, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that a supplier violated Section 2(e) by delivering "a product in a consistently late fashion to one purchaser while making timely deliveries to other purchasers." Delivery was deemed to be a "service or facility" within the meaning of Section 2(e) "because timely deliveries would obviously promote and facihtate the resale of a product." The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit refused Purdy's contentions. The court noted that the Contex-Winston ruling had often been criticized for expanding the scope of Section 2(e) beyond reasonable bounds. Further, the court stated that "even assuming that delivery is a 'service' as that term is used in Section 2(e). the actions of Champion do not violate that section." The court stressed that Champion did not dehver a promised product in a discriminatory marmer; but rather, refused to sell certain product lilies to Purdy. The court concluded by stating that the Robinson-Patman Act does not require a seller to supply all prospective customers. One should note the case of the unique line of argument used by the plaintiff and the reminder the case provides of the Contex-Winston decision. The Purdy-Champion case indicates the extreme to which arguments may be developed in Robinson-Patman cases, and the Contex-Winston case indicates that going to such extremes may be successful in Robinson-Patman cases. 4.0 REGULATION OF CHANNELS OF DISTRIBUTION 4.2 Relations between Buyers and Sellers: Exclusive Dealing Arrangements, etc. 1. Fuchs Sugars and Syrups, Inc.. and Francis J. Prael V. Amstar Corp., CCH 1| 62,700 (CA-2, June 1979); BNA ATRR No. 920 (June 28, 1979), A-1. [Knapp] When the nation's largest sugar refiner terminated one type of distributor and substituted another type, two of the terminated distributors sued the refiner for a conspiracy in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, As a result, they won an almost one-half million dollar treble damage award by the lower court. Marketers should understand the conditions under which such a switch in distributors can be legal or illegal, and how these conditions can be variously interpreted by different courts as reflected in this court of appeal's reasons for reversing the lower court's decision. Up to 1974, Amstar marketed its product through three types of distributors—general sugar brokers, direct sugar brokers, and its own sales force. General brokers served as agents for more than one refiner and direct brokers for only one refiner. All the terminated distributors were general brokers. Amstar switched from them presumably because the general brokers, even though principal agents of Amstar, acted with such "customer orientation" toward their buyers that "they at times acted more neariy as purchasing agents for Amstar's customers." The effects of the general brokers' action on behalf of their customers were often a reduction of price and profit for Amstar. The refiner, therefore, terminated all its general brokers, offering positions as direct brokers to some and termination payments to the others. Two terminated dis- tributors refused the payment and sued Amstar. The dealers argued that the intent and effect of Amstar's switch was to deprive sugar customers of market information, raise prices, and limit competition. The district court agreed that there was a conspiracy in restraint of trade. However, this court of appeals found no conspiracy. Reaffirming the right of a manufacturer to change from one distributor to another, or from one entire distribution system to another, the court said such changes do not constitute conspiracy where the manufacturer does not also try "to exact some collateral anticompetitive advantage." Amstar simply substituted one distribution system for another. The antitrust innocence of the switch was particularly evident in that Amstar acted unilaterally and kept its termination plan a closely guarded secret. The court noted the "elaborate security precautions" with which Amstar acted, and that the dealers, even those who later converted to direct brokers, took no part in the termination decision. Because Amstar acted unilaterally, it could not be faulted when it negotiated the conversion of some general brokers to direct brokers. The court said: "Indeed, if it is not an antitrust violation for a manufacturer to change his distribution system, then it can hardly be evidence of an illegal conspiracy that the manufacturer seeks merely to secure the personnel to man this new system." 2. Merlin R. Miller, Robert Meek, and Regal Services, Inc., V. International Dairy Queen, Inc., CCH f 62,593 (D.C. Minn., April 1979). [Knapp] This case reaffirmed some standard conditions under which a franchisor may refuse to approve or deal with distributors and franchisees. One special feature warrants marketers' attention: the request by the plaintiff that sought to become a party to a rather unusual distribution arrangement. That arrangement involved the presence between the franchisor and the franchisees of two organizations and marketing arrangements—a distribution division of the franchisor and that division's exclusive manufacturing agent. The defendant was the franchisor. International Dairy Queen, which develops, licenses, and franchises retail Dairy Queen stores. Dairy Queen prescribes the formula that franchised stores must use to make softserve ice milk, and requires that retail outlets purchase the base ice milk mix only from manufacturers approved by Dairy Queen. Dairy Queen has approved over 100 authorized mix manufacturers and was willing to approve additional manufacturers able to perform according to its standards. The uniqueness of the Dairy Queen marketing arrangement was that Dairy Queen had formed its own distribution arm called the Food Services Division, which purchased ice milk on an exclusive basis from a manufacturer—Kohler. Food Services was the only authorized mix manufacturer that could practically serve most of 250 Dairy Queen stores in a three-state area. Regal Services, the plaintiff, sought Dairy Queen authorization: (1) to become a distributor like Dairy Queen's Food Services Division and compete with it; and (2) to purchase mix from the manufacturer, Kohler. Dairy Queen refused. Regal Services brought this suit in order to enjoin Dairy Queen either to authorize Regal Services as a mix manufacturer or to prohibit Dairy Queen's refusal to permit Kohler sale of mix to Regal Services. Dairy Queen objected that it was not simply requested to approve a new manufacturer of mix, but to allow the appropriation of its Food Services source and distribution system. It further argued that it authorized mix manufacturers, not distributors; and that it could refuse to allow Kohler sales to Regal Services because of Kohler's exclusive contract with its own Food Services Division. Instead, Dairy Queen offered to approve an additional mix manufacturer and Regal Services' association with it, if the manufacturer met Dairy Queen's standards and entered into its mix manufacturing agreement. It also offered to permit Regal Services to purchase mix from previously authorized manufacturers. Regal Services charged that Dairy Queen was guilty of a group boycott with Kohler that was part of a system to limit access to the marketplace. The court ruled that there was no illegal combination or group boycott. The court added that Dairy Queen's exclusive agency agreement with Kohler was not an illegal combination or boycott because: (I) it was done as a unilateral action by Dairy Queen; (2) there was absence of several parties combining against another; (3) as an exclusive agency relationship there was one legal entity and therefore no possibility of combination between separate parties. The court also rejected Regal Services' second charge that Dairy Queen illegally tied the supply of mix to the granting of franchise outlets. Finally, the court rejected Regal's third claim of monopolization. The court said the relevant market was not Dairy Queen's authorized mix in the three-state area but instead the broader frozen dessert market. Dairy Queen did not monopolize this market because it had only 2% of it, because there were at least 36 dairies in the three-state area capable of producing the mix, and because of sufficient interchangeability of products. In conclusion, the court found that Regal Services was not restricted to operate in any way except one. It had access to both mix and to retail outlets. Its only limitation was its inabihty to purchase mix from Kohler and this was not illegal because of the exclusive agency agreement between Kohler and Dairy Queen. 3. Copy-Data Systems, Inc. et al. v. Toshiba America, Inc., CCH ij 62,696 (D.C. S. N.Y., June 1979). [Knapp] A major manufacturer of copying machines was guilty of per se violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act when it first encouraged a private distributor to market its machines, then aggressively competed with the distributor and took over the markets that the distributor had developed. In 1970, Copy-Data became an exclusive distributor of Toshiba copying machines in various eastern states. The Toshiba name was little known, so the distributor established the company name, found and trained new dealers, and penetrated new markets for the equipment. The distributor next became exclusive distributor for Toshiba in the Middle Atlantic states, and was asked by the manufacturer to develop the Chicago market which it did. Toshiba then pressured, coerced, and threatened CopyData, in Toshiba's drive to sell its own machines in competition with the distributor. The list of Toshiba's actions against its own dealer was long, including informing Copy-Data of its intention to sell directly in Chicago and ordering the distributor to turn over all its dealer information. Toshiba next told Copy-Data to give up the Middle Atlantic states and threatened the loss of Copy-Data's eastern states exclu- Legal Developments in Marketing / 85 sive distributorship if it refused. Retreat to the eastern seaboard was a short-term haven for Copy-Data, when Toshiba informed Copy-Data that it wanted to remove Copy-Data from the northeast area. Toshiba worked its will by limiting the number of machines it provided to Copy-Data to only those that would satisfy the demand in Copy-Data's home state of New Jersey. Toshiba further pressured Copy-Data by reducing its credit line to the distributor (eventually to zero) and by refusing to accept and credit the return of defective machines. At the same time, Toshiba was expanding its own direct selling in markets and through dealers developed earlier by Copy-Data. Its markets lost, its credit line cancelled, its cash flow stanched, Copy-Data had involuntary bankruptcy filed against it. For these actions, Toshiba was found guilty of per se violations and will have to pay treble damages, attorney's fees, and court costs, with the total amount to be determined at later proceedings. 5.0 REGULATION OF UNFAIR COMPETITION 5.1 Advertising 1. In re AMF Inc., CCH H 21,589, FTC File No. 782 3025 (July 1979). [Cohen] For the first time, a proposed FTC consent order agreement has required a company to produce informational messages to be used as public service announcements. The consent order required the company to produce two or more bicycle safety messages, 30 seconds to five minutes in length. The messages are to be aimed at children and prepared with the assistance of experts in bicycle safety, children's television programming, and children's advertising. This order represents parts of the FTC's current concern with advertising directed toward children. In a complaint against AMF, one of the largest manufacturers of bicycles and tricycles in America, the FTC charged that two AMF TV commercials depicted unsafe bicycle and tricycle riding and that such behavior could be imitated by children viewing the ads. A commercial for AMF's bicycle showed a young boy riding from a one-way street onto a sidewalk, then onto a dirt lot, and finally into an alley—eacb time without slowing down or looking right or left. Another commercial depicted one young boy riding an "Evel Knievel MX" bicycle and another very young boy riding an "Evel Knievel Hot Seat" tricycle. Both boys rode rapidly down separate, parallel driveways and into a street without looking out for cars or other dangers. On reaching the street, the two boys nearly collided with each other. The proposed order requires the company to prepare the messages and send them to 109 television stations, chosen because they carry a substantial amount of children's programming and because they broadcast to almost all of the markets in whicb the commercials were aired. The safety messages are to be public service announcements which the stations may air at their discretion. No air time will be purchased for the messages. AMF, however, would be required to monitor for four months the dissemination of the safety messages and report results to the Commission. A target number of "impressions" has been set for the two messages. If the target is not reached during the four-month period, AMF would be required to submit the messages to a second list of 140 stations, monitor their 86 / Journal of Marketing, Winter 1980 use for an additional four months, and provide the Commission with a second report. The proposed order also contains specific restrictions in advertising of bicycles and tricycles. 2. Jay Norris. Inc., Joel Jacobs, and Mortimer Williams V FTC, CCH H 62,623 (CA-2, May 1979); In re J. Walter Thompson Co., CCH ^ 21,555, FTC Dkt. 9104 (April 1979). [Cohen] ^ The FTC is continuing enforcement of its advertising substantiation program which requires an advertiser to bave a reasonable basis to substantiate a product's safety, performance, efficacy, quality, and comparative price claims, as reflected in the following cases. Jay Norris, a mail-order firm, is required to bave a "reasonable basis" for representing the safety or performance characteristic of any product before making any of these claims. This order is significant since it declares that substantiation materials should be available prior to the dissemination of a claim, and is the first litigated FTC order which requires substantiation of safety and performance claims for all of a finn's products. The court of appeals rejected defenses made by Norris that the FTC exceeded its powers and illegally shifted the burden of proof, but rephrased the order in tbe interest of clarity. In the rephrased order, Norris is prohibited from "representing the safety or performance characteristic(s) of any product unless . . . they . . . have a reasonable basis for the representations consisting of competent and objective material available in written form that fully and completely substantiates such characteristic{s)." The court declared tbe Commission did not go beyond its statutory powers in requiring prior substantiation. In fact, previous FTC orders containing such a requirement have been upheld in situations where a seller or manufacturer has misrepresented safety or performance. The order was not held to be too broad as it only dealt with safety and performance representations. Its application to all of Norris' products is acceptable due to the firm's past history of deception. A joint complaint was filed by the Commission against J. Walter Thompson and Sears, Roebuck & Co. in 1977 charging that advertisements for Sears' dishwashers were false and unsubstantiated. Under a recent consent-order agreement, J. Walter Thompson is required to have a reasonable basis for performance claims of a dishwasher before it placed ads. A "reasonable basis" in this context consists of competent and reliable scientific tests or opinions of experts qualified to render judgments in such matters. Under the agreement, the agency may rely on the substantiation furnished by the client, but it must evaluate such substantiation as to its reasonable basis. 3. In re The Kroger Co., CCH \ 21,585, FTC Dkt. 9102 (June 1979). [Cohen] A grocery chain's "Price Patrol" advertising campaign designed to compare prices with those of competitors was ruled by the FTC to be unfair and deceptive. According to administrative law Judge Hyun, upholding a 1977 FTC complaint, the advertising claims were misleading since they were based on surveys that were not methodologically sound, and did not disclose that meat, produce, and house brands were excluded from the survey. The Kroger Company, which operates 1,200 food stores
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