United States v. Engelhard Corporation , 126 F.3d 1302 ( 1997 )


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  •                                                           [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    No. 97-8320
    D. C. Docket No. 6:95-CV-45-WLS
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    versus
    ENGELHARD CORPORATION, FLORIDIN COMPANY
    U.S. BORAX INC., and U. S. SILICA COMPANY,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Georgia
    (October 23, 1997)
    Before EDMONDSON and DUBINA, Circuit Judges, and LIMBAUGH*, Senior
    District Judge.
    DUBINA, Circuit Judge:
    _________________________________________________________________
    *Honorable Stephen N. Limbaugh, Senior U.S. District Judge for the
    Eastern District of Missouri, sitting by designation.
    In this antitrust case, plaintiff-appellant The United States
    of America (“the Government”) appeals the district court’s order
    denying     its     request   for       a    permanent     injunction    prohibiting
    defendant-appellee        Engelhard           Corporation     (“Engelhard”)      from
    acquiring the assets of defendant-appellee Floridin Corporation
    (“Floridin”). The district court refused to enjoin the transaction
    after concluding that the Government failed to carry its burden of
    establishing the relevant product market.                    For the reasons that
    follow, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I.         BACKGROUND
    This    case     involves      a       transaction    between   Engelhard    and
    Floridin -- the two leading producers and distributors of gel
    quality attapulgite clay (“GQA”) in the United States.                    Only three
    companies currently produce GQA in the United States.                      Engelhard
    and Floridin each hold over forty percent (40%) of the GQA market.
    A third company, Milwhite, holds approximately fifteen percent
    (15%) of the GQA market.
    Attapulgite is a form of clay found throughout the world.                     In
    the United States it is found only along the Georgia-Florida
    border.     There are two forms of attapulgite.                  “Sorbent quality
    attapulgite,” as the name would indicate, has absorbent qualities
    and is used in products designed to absorb liquids.                     GQA, the type
    of attapulgite at issue in this case, is used as a thickening and
    suspension agent in a variety of industrial products, including
    suspension        fertilizers,   animal           feeds,   paints,   asphalt   roof-
    coatings, tape joint compounds, drilling fluids, and molecular
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    sieves.   Engelhard and Floridin process both sorbent quality
    attapulgite and GQA.   The Government has raised antitrust concerns
    solely with GQA.
    U.S. Silica, Floridin’s parent corporation, decided to get out
    of the attapulgite business and offered to sell Floridin’s assets.
    Engelhard expressed interest in purchasing Floridin’s assets, in
    large part to acquire Floridin’s more modern processing plant in
    Quincy, Florida.    In an attempt to avoid antitrust problems, the
    parties structured the deal so that Engelhard purchased only the
    Quincy processing plant and Floridin’s sorbent quality attapulgite
    business, not its GQA business.       A third party, ITC Corporation
    (“ITC”), would purchase Floridin’s GQA business. ITC and Engelhard
    planned to enter a joint venture agreement under which Engelhard
    would provide ITC with GQA at cost, the companies would share the
    Quincy processing plant, and would otherwise operate as independent
    distributors of GQA.
    The Government challenged the proposed transaction, arguing
    that it would substantially lessen competition in the GQA market.
    After a three-week bench trial, the district court found that the
    Government failed to carry its burden of establishing the relevant
    product market. Based on this threshold ruling, the district court
    did not reach the other issues in the case.       The district court
    entered an interim injunction to allow the Government to seek an
    injunction pending appeal from this court. We refused to issue the
    injunction but expedited the appeal.       The transaction has since
    been consummated.
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    II.    DISCUSSION
    The Government contends incorrectly that the district court
    rejected the approach of the U.S. Department of Justice and Federal
    Trade Commission Horizontal Merger Guidelines §§ 1.0 and 1.11
    (1992)   (hereinafter,   “the    Guidelines”)   as   to   product   market
    definition.   Under the Guidelines, the relevant inquiry is whether
    there are substitutes to which a customer would switch in response
    to a “small but significant and nontransitory price increase” in
    the product in question.    See AREEDA, HOVENKAMP & SOLOW, ANTITRUST LAW,
    Vol. IIA, ¶ 537a (1995) (hereinafter, “AREEDA”).      The Department of
    Justice (“DOJ”) quantifies a “small but significant price increase”
    as a five to ten percent (5-10%) permanent increase.         The DOJ uses
    the 5-10% test “to delineate the relevant market, to determine
    whether the merger is horizontal, to identify the other competitors
    in the market, and to assess the likelihood of entry.”         Speech of
    Assistant Attorney General James Rill, 7 Trade Reg. Rep. (CCH) ¶
    50,032 at 48,639.    Under this test, the Government asks whether
    customers of a particular product, for example Product A, would
    switch to alternative products in the face of a permanent 5-10%
    increase in the price of Product A by a hypothetical monopolist,
    where the increase is not cost justified.       If customers would not
    switch, then the Government views Product A as the relevant product
    market. If customers would switch to the alternative product, then
    the Government believes there is sufficient cross-elasticity of
    demand so that Product A and the alternative product are in the
    same product market.
    4
    In this case, the Government relied heavily on the 5-10% test
    at trial.    The Government produced evidence that current GQA
    customers would not switch to alternative products in the face of
    a 5-10% increase in the price of GQA.    Largely on this basis, the
    Government contends that GQA is the relevant product market and
    that the district court erred because, according to the Government,
    it rejected the 5-10% test.
    We disagree with the Government’s characterization of the
    district court’s order.   The district court did not reject the 5-
    10% test.   As the district court stated in its order denying the
    Government’s motion for an injunction pending appeal:
    under the facts of record as presented to the Court, the
    5%-10% test, as applied by the plaintiff, to a limited
    number   of   consumers   provided   contradictory    and
    inconclusive answers as to what, if any, competition
    exists between gel quality attapulgite and other products
    for the purposes of relevant product analysis.
    Dist. Ct. Order at 4 (RE Tab # 138).    In fact, in response to the
    Government’s contention that the district court had rejected the 5-
    10% test, the court explicitly stated that “[i]n light of the
    inadequacies in breadth and scope of the plaintiff’s inquiries to
    consumers, the Court could not hold that gel quality attapulgite
    constituted a relevant market even under the plaintiff’s 5 to 10
    percent standard.” 
    Id. at 5.
    The district court’s decision turned
    on the Government’s failure to prove the product market it alleged.
    Establishing the relevant product market is an essential element in
    the Government’s case.    See U.S. Anchor Mfg., Inc. v. Rule Indus.
    Inc., 
    7 F.3d 986
    , 994 (11th Cir. 1993) (“Defining the market is a
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    necessary    step    in    any     analysis    of   market    power   and       thus    an
    indispensable element in the consideration of any monopolization or
    attempt case arising under section 2.").               Despite the Government’s
    protestations to the contrary, this case does not touch upon broad
    antitrust principles, but instead turns on a simple question asked
    in every civil case -- whether the plaintiff carried its burden of
    proof.    Therefore, it is unnecessary for us to address, as a
    general matter of law, the validity of the 5-10% test.
    “The definition of the relevant market is essentially a
    factual question.”         U.S. 
    Anchor, 7 F.3d at 994
    .             Thus, we review
    the district court’s determination that the Government did not
    prove the relevant product market under the clearly erroneous
    standard.    National Bancard Corp. v. Visa U.S.A., Inc., 
    779 F.2d 592
    , 604 (11th Cir. 1986); Cable Holdings, Inc. v. Home Video,
    Inc., 
    825 F.2d 1559
    , 1563 n.6 (11th Cir. 1987).                In determining the
    relevant market, “[t]he finder of fact normally is presented with
    voluminous    expert      testimony      and   other      evidence.        In   such     a
    situation, its factual findings are accorded great deference.”
    National 
    Bancard, 779 F.2d at 604
    .             Therefore, the issue before us
    is whether the district court committed clear error in finding that
    the Government did not prove that GQA is a relevant product market.
    “Defining a relevant product market is primarily a process of
    describing    those       groups    of   producers        which,   because      of     the
    similarity    of    their    products,     have     the    ability    --   actual      or
    potential -- to take significant amounts of business away from each
    other.”     U.S. 
    Anchor, 7 F.3d at 995
    (quotations omitted).                           The
    6
    boundaries of the product market are determined by “the reasonable
    interchangeability of use or the cross-elasticity of demand between
    the product itself and substitutes for it.”             Brown Shoe Co. v.
    United States, 
    370 U.S. 294
    , 325 (1962); see also, AREEDA, Vol. IIA,
    ¶   530a   (“[A]   market   is   the   arena   within   which   significant
    substitution in consumption or production occurs.”).               Although
    every product has a substitute, the relevant product market does
    not encompass all substitutes. Times-Picayune Publ’g Co. v. United
    States, 
    435 U.S. 594
    , 612 n.31 (1953).         “The circle must be drawn
    narrowly to exclude any other product to which, within reasonable
    variations in price, only a limited number of buyers will turn; in
    technical terms, products whose ‘cross-elasticities of demand’ are
    small.”    
    Id. The district
    court found that the Government did not prove
    that GQA was the relevant product market after concluding that the
    Government’s methodology used to gather data was grievously flawed.
    The court criticized the Government’s case on several grounds.
    Likewise, the Government on appeal has roundly criticized the
    district court’s view of the evidence.             However, we need not
    discuss each disputed fact at issue in this case.                Under the
    clearly erroneous standard, we must affirm the district court
    unless review of the entire record leaves us “with the definite and
    firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”             Anderson v.
    Bessemer City, 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 573 (1985) (citing United States v.
    United States Gypsum Co., 
    333 U.S. 364
    , 395 (1948)).            As long as
    the district court’s findings are plausible, we may not reverse the
    7
    district court even if we would have decided the case differently.
    
    Anderson, 470 U.S. at 573-74
    (“Where there are two permissible
    views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot
    be clearly erroneous.”).
    There are good reasons for our deference to district courts in
    determining matters of fact.         As stated by the Supreme Court:
    The trial judge’s major role is the determination of
    fact, and with experience in fulfilling that role comes
    expertise. Duplication of the trial judge’s efforts in
    the court of appeals would very likely contribute only
    negligibly to the accuracy of fact determination at a
    huge cost in diversion of judicial resources.          In
    addition, the parties to a case on appeal have already
    been forced to concentrate their energies and resources
    on persuading the trial judge that their account of the
    facts is the correct one; requiring them to persuade
    three more judges at the appellate level is requiring too
    much.
    
    Anderson, 470 U.S. at 574-75
    .           This is all the more true in an
    antitrust   case   such   as    this   where     the    district   court    heard
    voluminous evidence over the course of a three-week bench trial.
    See   National   
    Bancard, 779 F.2d at 604
    .     Thus,    rather    than
    discussing each piece of evidence in as much detail as did the
    district court, we will focus on what, in our view, are the most
    obvious shortcomings in the Government’s case.
    First, when determining the relevant market, the question is
    whether a hypothetical monopolist could profitably raise price. If
    a sufficient number of customers switch to alternative products,
    then the hypothetical GQA price increase can become unprofitable.
    Furthermore, it is possible for only a few customers who switch to
    alternatives to make the price increase unprofitable, thereby
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    protecting a larger number of customers who would have acquiesced
    in    higher   GQA   prices.    To    evaluate     such   possibilities,    the
    Government should have ascertained the size of the GQA market in
    its different end-use applications.               However, the Government’s
    expert, Dr. Bodisch, could not identify the number of companies
    using GQA in many of its end-use applications.             Dist. Ct. Order at
    17.    This undermines the Government’s entire case.              No matter how
    many customers in each end-use industry the Government may have
    interviewed, those results cannot be predictive of the entire
    market if those customers are not representative of the market.
    Without knowing the size of the market, we cannot know if the
    customers interviewed are representative of that market. In short,
    under the circumstances of this case, evidence on the size of the
    GQA market was essential, and its absence casts a shadow over the
    reliability of all Dr. Bodisch’s conclusions.
    Second, the Government failed to consider competition in the
    pre-formulation industrial thickener market -- competition before
    GQA has been selected as an ingredient.            In applying the test, the
    Government asked current GQA customers whether they would switch to
    alternative     products   in   the   face   of   a   permanent    5-10%   price
    increase.      The evidence showed that they would not.           However, the
    record is replete with evidence that GQA is used in specially
    formulated products designed to achieve very particular end-use
    requirements.        A change in the type of thickener or suspension
    agent used may change the product’s end-use performance, thus
    requiring testing and reformulation before the product will perform
    9
    properly. In fact, some GQA customers are even reluctant to switch
    among GQA suppliers for fear of reformulation costs and performance
    problems. Moreover, some Engelhard customers testified that they
    would not switch to Floridin GQA if faced with a 5-10% increase in
    price.     This makes clear that current GQA customers consider the
    high cost of reformulation in their responses to the 5-10% question
    posed by the Government. Additionally, GQA customers are reluctant
    to switch because GQA makes up only a small percentage of the final
    cost of the products in which it is used.          See Dist. Ct. Order at
    8 (finding that GQA makes up 0.1% to 10% of total cost of products
    in which it is an ingredient and on average makes up 5% or less of
    total cost).      Therefore, a 10% increase in the price of GQA on
    average will increase the overall cost of a $100 product by only 50
    cents.
    Consideration of reformulation costs and the minuscule impact
    of GQA prices on the price of the finished products in which it is
    used, explain why current GQA users are reluctant to switch in the
    face of hypothetical price increases sometimes well in excess of
    10%.     More    importantly,   however,   it   highlights    the    need   for
    evidence    of   pre-formulation   competition     among     GQA    and   other
    industrial thickeners and suspension agents.         Certainly, Engelhard
    and Floridin are not content to simply hold on to the GQA business
    they now have; rather, they hope to expand it.         As new products of
    all stripes are developed and old products are reformulated, GQA
    must compete against other industrial thickeners and suspension
    agents or become obsolete.      For example, if GQA and an alternative
    10
    product competed at the pre-formulation stage, that competition
    might protect current GQA users (who would acquiesce in much higher
    GQA prices) from the exercise of monopoly power.              As the district
    court stated:
    [The Government] presupposes that competition can only
    exist at the post-formulation stage, when GQA has already
    been chosen as an ingredient in an end-use product. . .
    [This] highlights the failure of the 5-10% test to
    account for the possibility that purchasers and potential
    purchasers of GQA could opt to use a substitute substance
    for the same function when creating a new product or
    retooling an old one. Such formulation stage competition
    could   very   well   serve  as   a   restraint   against
    anticompetitive price increases by forcing GQA producers
    to price their products competitively or price themselves
    out of the market completely.
    Dist. Ct. Order at 11-12.      Given the evidence in the record of high
    reformulation costs and the low cost of GQA in relation to the
    products in which it is used, evidence on the pre-formulation
    industrial thickener market was essential.
    Although not directly on point, we agree with the district
    court   that   the   Supreme   Court’s     analysis   in   United     States   v.
    Continental Can Co., 
    378 U.S. 441
    (1963), supports the district
    court’s view of the evidence in this case.                   Continental Can
    involved   the   merger   of   the   second    largest     producer    of   metal
    containers and the third largest producer of glass containers.
    Although the district court found competition between glass, metal,
    and plastic containers, the district court did not find glass and
    metal to be in the same market.               The Supreme Court reversed.
    Although customers who pack their goods in cans versus bottles do
    not switch back and forth each day as prices of cans and bottles
    11
    vary,     the    Court      held    that     glass     and    metal      containers           could
    constitute the same product market.
    [T]hough the interchangeability of use may not be so
    complete and the cross-elasticity of demand not so
    immediate as in the case of most intraindustry mergers,
    there is over the long run the kind of customer response
    to innovation and other competitive stimuli that brings
    the competition between these two industries within § 7's
    competition-preserving proscriptions. . . That there are
    price differentials between the two products or that the
    demand for one is not particularly or immediately
    responsive to changes in the price of the other are
    relevant matters but not determinative of the product
    market issue.
    Continental 
    Can, 378 U.S. at 455
    .                    A similar situation exists in
    the industrial thickener market.                    Although the demand for GQA is
    not immediately responsive to changes in the price of GQA or other
    industrial        thickeners,         GQA     competes        with      other      industrial
    thickeners when products are being formulated.                         Over the long run,
    this pre-formulation competition may protect current GQA users from
    the exercise of market power.1                      Of course, we do not mean to
    1
    Professor Areeda describes a similar problem as the “time factor” of market power. It is
    illustrative here as well:
    A defendant’s market power may be greater in the very short run than in some
    longer period. [B]uyers shift quite rapidly among substantially identical products
    when relative prices change, quickly revealing the cross-elasticity of demand
    between brands X and Y. Shifts may take more time when substitute products
    differ significantly in their physical characteristics. A coal-burning boiler may
    not be readily convertible to natural gas; a baker’s wrapping machine may handle
    only cellophane, not wax paper. Despite a rising relative price for coal or
    cellophane, shifting to gas or paper may not be economical for these users until
    their boilers or wrapping machines “wear out.” Consequently, demand shifts may
    be gradual, thus delaying their full impact on price for several years, during which
    the defendant’s power would be declining.
    AREEDA, Vol. IIA, ¶ 530c.
    12
    suggest that this pre-formulation competition necessarily would
    prevent a hypothetical GQA monopolist from profitably raising
    prices.    On this issue, the record is inadequate because the
    Government did not offer evidence of pre-formulation competition.
    Without   such    evidence,   determining       whether       a    hypothetical
    monopolist could profitably raise GQA prices is pure guesswork.
    The Government’s methodology for determining the relevant
    product   market,   as   applied   in    this   case,   was       flawed.   The
    Government failed to ascertain the size of the GQA market and did
    not consider the possibility that pre-formulation competition could
    restrain GQA prices.      After thoroughly reviewing the record, we
    cannot say the district court was clearly erroneous in holding that
    the Government failed to carry its burden of establishing the
    relevant product market.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the
    district court.
    AFFIRMED.
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