Reeder-Simco GMC v. Volvo GM Heavy Truck ( 2004 )


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  •                       United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 02-2462
    ___________
    Reeder-Simco GMC, Inc.,            *
    *
    Appellee,              *
    *
    v.                            * Appeal from the United States
    * District Court for the
    Volvo GM Heavy Truck Corporation, * Western District of Arkansas.
    now known as Volvo Trucks North    *
    America, Inc.,                     *
    *
    Appellant.             *
    ___________
    Submitted: April 15, 2003
    Filed: July 12, 2004
    ___________
    Before BYE, RICHARD S. ARNOLD, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    BYE, Circuit Judge.
    Volvo Trucks North America, Inc. (Volvo) appeals from a judgment entered
    in the district court1 in favor of Reeder-Simco GMC, Inc. (Reeder) on claims alleging
    unfair price discrimination under the Robinson-Patman Act (RPA), 15 U.S.C. § 13,
    and a failure to deal in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner under the
    1
    The Honorable Robert T. Dawson, United States District Court for the
    Western District of Arkansas.
    Arkansas Franchise Practices Act (AFPA), Ark. Code Ann. §§ 4-72-201 through 4-
    72-209. We affirm.
    I
    This is an appeal from the denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law
    (JAML) following a jury verdict; consequently we recite the evidence in the light
    most favorable to the verdict holder, Reeder. See Jones v. Swanson, 
    341 F.3d 723
    ,
    731 (8th Cir. 2003).
    Reeder sells new and used trucks, including heavy-duty trucks, out of a
    dealership located in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Volvo manufactures a broad line of
    heavy-duty trucks for both over-the-road and vocational use (dump trucks, mixer
    trucks, etc.). In 1995, Reeder signed a franchise agreement with Volvo to become an
    authorized Volvo truck dealer for a five-year term expiring March 31, 2000. The
    agreement provided for automatic one-year extensions of the franchise if Reeder met
    certain sales objectives established unilaterally by Volvo.
    The majority of heavy-duty trucks sold by dealers are manufactured only after
    a retail customer has solicited and accepted bids from several dealers. During this
    competitive bidding process, dealers seek concessions from Volvo for a price below
    the initial wholesale price (80% of the published retail price) which then allows the
    dealers to offer lower prices to their customers. This is an industry-wide practice.
    To remain competitive with other truck manufacturers, Volvo does not reveal its
    method of calculating concessions. The crux of this case is Reeder's claim that
    Volvo gave other dealers more favorable price concessions than Volvo granted
    Reeder, which concomitantly reduced Reeder's profits on successful bids and
    increased the number of Reeder's unsuccessful bids.
    -2-
    Reeder filed this action in February 2000 alleging Volvo violated the RPA and
    AFPA and tortiously interfered with Reeder's contracts. The RPA claim alleged both
    primary-line and secondary-line violations (explained below). The district court
    granted Volvo's motion for summary judgment on the alleged primary-line RPA
    violation and claim for tortious interference. The remaining claims – the secondary-
    line RPA and AFPA claims – were tried to a jury.
    Reeder presented the following evidence at trial. In December 1997, Volvo
    announced the "Volvo Vision" in an email distributed to its dealers, including Reeder.
    The email had a list of Volvo's challenges, which included "too many dealers" and
    "under performing dealers." App. 576. The Volvo Vision called for "fewer dealers,
    larger markets." 
    Id. The email
    further indicated Volvo wanted to more than double
    the average market size of its dealers and decrease the number of dealer owners from
    146 to 75.
    In March 1998, Volvo held its annual North American Dealer Conference in
    Marco Island, Florida. Marc Gustavson, a Volvo executive, was the conference's
    keynote speaker. He elaborated on the Volvo Vision by indicating 50% of current
    Volvo truck dealers would not be in business in the next few years. Unlike Volvo's
    past annual dealer conferences, where Volvo featured motivational speakers who got
    dealers "revved up" to sell more trucks, 
    id. at 1119,
    the featured guest speaker of the
    1998 conference was Jon Krakauer, author of "Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of
    the Mt. Everest Disaster." Krakauer spoke of falling short of his goal to reach the
    summit of Mt. Everest and told the dealers sometimes they had to learn to give up
    without achieving their goals.
    Prior to and during this same time frame (1996-1998), Reeder noticed an
    increase in the sales objectives Volvo expected of it, coupled with a decrease in the
    pricing concessions it obtained from Volvo. After learning of the Volvo Vision and
    its stated goal of reducing the number of authorized Volvo dealers, as well as
    -3-
    mistakenly receiving faxes from Volvo intended for other dealers which listed larger
    concessions than Reeder was getting, Reeder came to suspect it was one of the dealers
    Volvo sought to eliminate.
    A.    Head-to-Head Competition with Another Dealer for the Same Customer.
    Reeder presented evidence that in the summer of 1999, it bid on the sale of
    twelve trucks to Hiland Dairy Company located in Springfield, Missouri. Reeder
    requested a 12% concession, but Volvo authorized only 7.5%. Another Volvo
    authorized dealer, Southwest Missouri Truck Center in Springfield, successfully
    obtained the Hiland Dairy contract when Volvo granted it an 8.5% concession. As
    a result of the difference in price concessions, Southwest could offer the Missouri
    customer a price of $62,890 per truck, while Reeder's price per truck was $63,632.69.
    Had Reeder obtained the account, it would have realized a gross profit of $30,000 on
    the sale.
    B.    Contemporaneous Sales of Like Grade and Quality Trucks in Which Favored
    Volvo Dealers Received Greater Price Concessions than Reeder.
    In March 1998, Reeder successfully bid on the sale of thirty trucks to Lane
    Freight located in Tulsa, Oklahoma, involving a mixture of over-the-road day-cab and
    sleeper-cab trucks. Reeder initially requested a 12.51% concession on this sale.
    When Volvo denied the request, Reeder asked for a 10% concession on the day-cab
    trucks and 8.4% on the sleepers. Volvo ultimately granted a 9% concession on both
    truck types. Two months earlier, Volvo had granted a dealer located in Tyler, Texas,
    a 12.3% concession on the sale of twelve trucks of like grade and quality to
    Brookshire Grocery located in Tyler. As a result of the difference in concessions, the
    price Reeder's customer paid for each truck was $2,606 higher than the price the
    Texas dealer provided to its customer. Had Volvo offered Reeder the 12.3%
    -4-
    concession the Texas dealer received, Reeder would have realized $52,120 in
    additional profits.2
    In February 1997, Reeder successfully bid on the sale of two dump trucks to
    the city of Fort Smith, Arkansas. Volvo granted Reeder a 19% concession on the
    sale. Three months earlier, Volvo had granted a Kansas City, Missouri, dealer a 21%
    concession on a sale of two trucks of like grade and quality to Rapidways, a customer
    located in Kansas City. Once again, had Volvo offered Reeder the same price
    concession the Kansas City dealer received, Reeder would have realized additional
    profits for its sale.
    In November 1996, Reeder successfully bid on the sale of twenty trucks to New
    Hi-Way, another Fort Smith customer. Volvo granted Reeder a 24.2% concession on
    this sale. In February 1997, Volvo granted a Kahoka, Missouri, dealer a 27.3%
    concession on the sale of five trucks of like grade and quality to Harold Dickey
    Transport, a customer located in Kahoka. Reeder would have realized higher profits
    from its successful sale had Volvo granted it a price concession similar to the one
    offered the other dealer.
    In February 1996, Reeder successfully bid on the sale of three trucks to Sam
    Ludington, another Fort Smith customer. Volvo granted Reeder a concession of
    13.27% on this sale. At trial, Reeder compared this three-truck sale to three single-
    truck sales of like grade and quality trucks made by three separate dealers (in Kansas
    City, Missouri; Sikeston, Missouri; and Memphis, Tennessee) in September 1996,
    2
    Reeder also presented evidence showing Lane Freight wanted to add
    additional trucks to the sale, but Volvo denied Reeder even the original 9%
    concession, and offered only a 7% concession on the additional trucks. Volvo's
    conduct caused Reeder to lose profits on the sale of these additional trucks and
    damaged Reeder's relationship with Lane Freight to the extent that Reeder lost all
    future sales to Lane Freight.
    -5-
    April 1996, and February 1996. In all three instances, the price concessions Volvo
    granted the other dealers exceeded the price concession given to Reeder, 18.04%,
    15.42%, and 14.53%, respectively.
    C.    Unsuccessful Sales Following Volvo's Refusal to Grant Requested Price
    Concessions.
    In a third category of evidence Reeder presented to prove price discrimination,
    Reeder recounted numerous situations in which it unsuccessfully requested particular
    concessions from Volvo to close sales, while during the same time frame Volvo
    granted higher concessions to other Volvo dealers who were able to close sales. For
    example, in January 1998 Reeder was working on the sale of 170 trucks to Beach
    Trucking. Reeder requested a price concession of 26.7%, but Volvo only approved
    23.8%. Reeder did not get the Beach Trucking contract. During the same time,
    Volvo gave another dealer a higher price concession on a smaller number of the same
    trucks, a 26.1% concession on sixty trucks. The other dealer got its contract. In May
    1998, Reeder sought a price concession of 21% on a sale of five trucks. Volvo
    approved only 2%. Reeder did not get its contract. During the same time, Volvo
    gave another dealer a 10.6% concession on a sale of three trucks of like grade and
    quality. The other dealer got its contract.
    The jury returned a verdict in favor of Reeder on both claims and awarded
    damages of $1,358,000 on the RPA claim and $513,750 on the AFPA claim. The trial
    court trebled the RPA damages pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 15a and awarded Reeder
    attorney fees. Volvo brought a motion for JAML following trial. The district court
    denied the motion, and Volvo filed a timely appeal with this court.3
    3
    Reeder did not cross-appeal the district court's grant of summary judgment in
    favor of Volvo on the alleged primary-line RPA violation.
    -6-
    II
    "We review the denial of a motion for JAML de novo." Naucke v. City of Park
    Hills, 
    284 F.3d 923
    , 929 (8th Cir. 2002). Although our review is de novo, a party
    seeking posttrial JAML based on the sufficiency of the evidence "faces an onerous
    burden [because we must] view the evidence in a light most favorable to the jury's
    verdict [and reverse only] when there is a complete absence of probative facts to
    support the conclusion reached." Inacom Corp. v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 
    254 F.3d 683
    , 689 (8th Cir. 2001).
    A.    The RPA Claim
    The RPA provides, in pertinent part:
    It shall be unlawful for any person engaged in commerce . . . to
    discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities of
    like grade and quality, where either or any of the purchases involved in
    such discrimination are in commerce, . . . and where the effect of such
    discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition or tend to
    create a monopoly in any line of commerce, or to injure, destroy, or
    prevent competition with any person who either grants or knowingly
    receives the benefit of such discrimination, or with customers of either
    of them.
    15 U.S.C. § 13(a).
    There are three types of violations under the RPA. Primary-line violations
    occur when a seller's price discrimination adversely impacts competition with its own
    competitors. Secondary-line violations occur when a seller's price discrimination
    injures competition among its customers. Tertiary-line violations occur when a
    discriminating seller's purchasers do not compete directly, but their customers
    compete within a unified market region. Godfrey v. Pulitzer Publ'g Co., 161 F.3d
    -7-
    1137, 1140 (8th Cir. 1998) (Godfrey I). In the instant case, Reeder avers a secondary-
    line violation, claiming Volvo's price discrimination injured competition among
    Volvo's customers, i.e., Reeder and other Volvo dealers.
    To prove its claim, Reeder had to show 1) Volvo discriminated in price
    between Reeder and the favored dealers, 2) this price discrimination substantially
    affected competition between Reeder and the favored dealers, 3) the truck sales
    occurred in interstate commerce, and 4) the trucks sold by Reeder and the other
    dealers were of like grade and quality. Godfrey v. Pulitzer Publ'g, Inc., 
    276 F.3d 405
    ,
    408 (8th Cir. 2002) (Godfrey II). In addition, because the RPA prohibits price
    discrimination "between different purchasers," 15 U.S.C. § 13(a), Reeder had to show
    there were actual sales at two different prices to two different Volvo dealers, i.e., a
    sale to itself and a sale to another Volvo dealer. Fusco v. Xerox Corp., 
    676 F.2d 332
    ,
    335 (8th Cir. 1982). In other words, as a threshold matter Reeder had to show it was
    a "purchaser" within the meaning of the RPA. 
    Id. at 334.
    1.     Two-Purchase Requirement
    Volvo contends competitive bidding situations do not implicate the RPA
    because an unsuccessful bidder is not a purchaser. Volvo emphasizes that much of
    Reeder's proof involved situations where Reeder did not purchase trucks from Volvo.
    Reeder did not purchase trucks from Volvo in the head-to-head competition with
    another dealer for the Hiland Dairy contract, for example, because the other dealer got
    the contract. Likewise, Reeder did not actually purchase trucks from Volvo in those
    situations where Reeder compared its unsuccessful bids to other dealers' successful
    sales based on better price concessions.
    We agree an unsuccessful bidder is not a purchaser within the meaning of the
    RPA. In Fusco, we said a purchaser is one who actually makes a purchase, not "one
    who [merely] seeks to purchase, a person who goes into the market-place for the
    -8-
    purpose of 
    purchasing." 676 F.2d at 335
    (quoting Shaw's, Inc. v. Wilson-Jones Co.,
    
    105 F.2d 331
    , 333 (3d Cir. 1939)). "Thus, a sale at one price plus either an offer to
    sell at a higher price or a refusal to sell at any price is generally thought not to violate
    the [RPA]." 
    Id. (citing M.C.
    Mfg. Co. v. Texas Foundries, Inc., 
    517 F.2d 1059
    , 1065
    n.11 (5th Cir. 1975)). When Reeder unsuccessfully bid on contracts because Volvo's
    price concessions were not favorable enough to obtain the contracts, Reeder did not
    actually purchase trucks from Volvo. Thus, Reeder was not a purchaser in those
    instances, but merely went into the market-place for the purpose of purchasing.
    Volvo may have offered to sell trucks to Reeder at a higher price than it offered to
    other dealers, but mere offers to sell do not violate the RPA.
    This conclusion is consistent with the conclusion of many courts that hold price
    discrimination in the competitive bidding process does not violate the RPA because
    only one of the two competitors actually makes a purchase. See, e.g., Terry's Floor
    Fashions, Inc. v. Burlington Indus., Inc., 
    763 F.2d 604
    , 615 (4th Cir. 1985) (holding
    carpet dealer, who alleged carpet manufacturer offered a competing dealer more
    favorable price quotes during the competitive bidding process for commercial carpet
    contracts, failed to state a claim under the RPA because the dealer "had not shown,
    or even alleged, two comparable, completed sales"); Shaw's, Inc. v. Wilson-Jones
    Co., 
    105 F.2d 331
    , 334 (3d Cir. 1939) ("[The RPA] does not compel a seller of
    commodities to offer them to all persons who may wish to bid upon a contract to
    resell them to a third party."); Maier-Schule GMC, Inc. v. Gen. Motors Corp., 780 F.
    Supp. 984, 989 (W.D. N.Y. 1991) (holding truck dealer failed to state an RPA claim
    against Volvo and other truck manufacturers by offering dealer's three competitors
    more favorable discounts where plaintiff dealer purchased no trucks during the
    relevant time period); Olympia Co. v. Celotex Corp., 
    597 F. Supp. 285
    , 297 (E.D. La.
    1984) ("[T]he Act protects purchasers in competition with one another at the time of
    the purchases; it is irrelevant that the companies may have entered into competitive
    bidding, or that the successful bidder was ultimately able to obtain prices below those
    offered to its competitors in the bidding process."); but see American Can Co. v.
    -9-
    Bruce's Juices, Inc., 
    187 F.2d 919
    , 924 (5th Cir. 1951) (suggesting an exception to the
    two-purchase requirement when the plaintiff's failure to purchase is directly
    attributable to the defendant's discriminatory pricing practice); Indus. Burner Sys.,
    Inc. v. Maxon Corp., 
    275 F. Supp. 2d 878
    , 886 (E.D. Mich. 2003) (recognizing the
    exception and denying summary judgment motion even though RPA plaintiff was
    nothing more than an unsuccessful bidder).
    In this case, however, Volvo concedes Reeder was more than an unsuccessful
    bidder. Reeder gave four examples where it actually purchased Volvo trucks
    following successful bids on contracts. Reeder compared those successful sales to
    actual sales made by other dealers during the same time period (Reeder purchased
    fifty-five trucks and compared those purchases to other dealers' purchases of twenty-
    two trucks). Although Volvo challenges the sufficiency of these actual purchase-to-
    purchase comparisons on other grounds (addressed below), these successful bids
    clearly gave Reeder "purchaser" status. As a result, it follows Reeder was entitled to
    pursue a claim for price discrimination under the RPA. See, e.g., DeLong Equip. Co.
    v. Washington Mills Electro Minerals Corp., 
    990 F.2d 1186
    , 1202 (11th Cir. 1993)
    (recognizing that even "minimal sales" (i.e., minimal purchases from manufacturer)
    made by an otherwise unsuccessful bidder are enough for bidder to state an RPA
    claim).
    2.     Actual Competition
    Volvo argues Reeder failed to show it was in actual competition with the
    favored dealers. The standard for showing actual competition is whether, "as of the
    time the price differential was imposed, the favored and disfavored purchasers
    competed at the same functional level, i.e., all wholesalers or all retailers, and within
    the same geographic market." Best Brands Beverage, Inc. v. Falstaff Brewing Corp.,
    
    842 F.2d 578
    , 585 (2d Cir. 1987). Here there is no dispute the dealers all competed
    -10-
    at the same functional level, but Volvo contends Reeder did not compete within the
    same geographic market as the favored dealers. We disagree.
    Although Reeder had an assigned geographic area (ten counties in western
    Arkansas and two counties in eastern Oklahoma), it was free to sell outside that area,
    and did so. Reeder introduced evidence that it looked to the entire continental United
    States in making its sales, and had sold or delivered trucks in Arkansas, Oklahoma,
    Missouri, Texas, Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, North Carolina,
    Georgia, Colorado, and Oregon. Reeder also established that end-buyers of the trucks
    are very mobile and price-shop nationwide.
    Reeder's evidence focused upon sales and bids made in the southwest region
    of the United States. Reeder presented evidence of sales or bids it made in three
    states in the southwest region (Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma) and compared the
    sales or bids to those made by other dealers in four states in the southwest region
    (Arkansas, Missouri, Texas, and Tennessee). Reeder presented at least two instances
    where it competed directly with a favored dealer – the head-to-head competition with
    Southwest Missouri Truck Center in Springfield, Missouri, for a twelve-truck deal to
    Hiland Dairy, and a concession request from Reeder for a five-truck deal to Tommy
    Davidson which also involved a bid made by a Volvo dealer in Springdale, Arkansas.
    Finally, Reeder presented evidence about Volvo's designated Southwest Region to
    show there were no natural or physical barriers that would restrict the flow of heavy
    trucks in commerce or affect the freedom of customers to travel throughout the region
    to purchase heavy trucks. From this evidence a jury could reasonably decide Reeder
    was in actual competition with favored dealers. See Godfrey 
    II, 276 F.3d at 411
    ("[A]lthough . . . dealers operate in exclusive geographic territories, that fact is not
    dispositive on the question of competition. Even where parties operate in airtight
    territories, they compete if the end-buyers of the product can freely travel between the
    geographic areas to purchase the commodity in question.").
    -11-
    3.     Like Grade and Quality; Reasonably Contemporaneous in Time
    To establish an RPA violation, Reeder had to show the comparative sales
    involved trucks of like grade and quality. 
    Id. at 408.
    Products are not of like grade
    and quality "if there are substantial physical differences in products affecting
    consumer use, preference or marketability." Checker Motors Corp. v. Chrysler Corp.,
    
    283 F. Supp. 876
    , 889 (S.D. N.Y. 1968), aff'd, 
    405 F.2d 319
    (2d Cir. 1969). Volvo
    argues the sales-to-sales comparisons made by Reeder involved trucks with different
    major components that affected consumer preference and marketability. In support
    of its position Volvo points to trial testimony which showed differences in truck
    components influence consumers' decisions to buy – particularly engine types and
    gear ratios.
    Reeder offered testimony, however, showing that any differences in
    components were inconsequential – in all cases the trucks were the same model and
    same year, with comparable engines and largely similar components. Also, Reeder
    provided evidence that the differences in components were taken into account in the
    calculation of the price quotes and concessions, so the jury could reasonably conclude
    that when the comparisons involved trucks with somewhat different components, the
    differences did not substantially affect the concessions Volvo offered.
    We note the RPA says the commodities involved must be of like grade and
    quality, not identical grade and quality. We have previously indicated the concept
    "was designed to serve as one of the necessary rough guides for separating out those
    commercial transactions insufficiently comparable for price regulation by the statute."
    Moog Indus. v. Fed.Trade Comm'n, 
    238 F.2d 43
    , 50 (8th Cir. 1956) (quoting the
    Report of the Attorney General's Nat'l Comm. to Study the Anti-Trust Laws 157
    (1955)) (emphasis added). We believe our comments have been correctly interpreted
    to reflect a "sensible approach," and a "somewhat flexible application" of the like
    -12-
    grade and quality concept. White Indus., Inc. v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 
    657 F. Supp. 687
    , 698 (W.D. Mo. 1987) (applying Moog).
    Here, the jury was instructed on the concept of like grade and quality, and
    Volvo does not argue the district court erred in its instructions. The jury found by
    special interrogatory the comparisons involved trucks of like grade and quality. We
    acknowledge there was conflicting evidence on the substantiality of the differences
    in components, but there was ample evidence supporting the jury's determination the
    differences were immaterial. "There was conflicting evidence on this issue, and it
    could have gone either way. Making decisions of this kind is exactly what juries are
    for." GLB Enters., Inc. v. United States, 
    232 F.3d 965
    , 969 (8th Cir. 2000) (quotation
    omitted).
    Reeder also had to show the comparative sales were reasonably
    contemporaneous in time, but "there is no requirement that the two sales be made at
    precisely the same time or place." DeLong 
    Equip., 990 F.2d at 1202
    (11th Cir. 1993).
    The four sales-to-sales comparisons offered by Reeder were between one and four
    months apart, with one exception; Reeder compared its three-truck sale to Sam
    Ludington in February 1996 to three separate one-truck sales by other dealers, and
    one of those sales took place in September 1996 (another took place in February 1996
    and the third in April 1996). Volvo argues the sales were not contemporaneous
    because as little as a single-month gap could make a substantial difference in the price
    concession it offered due to changes in model-year availability or backlog or both.
    Volvo refers us to a part of the trial transcript that says exactly that, as little as a
    month "could make a difference." Volvo's Brief at 35 (referring to App. 1623)
    (emphasis added). Volvo never presented evidence, however, to show the gaps
    between the sales comparisons involved in this case did make a difference in the price
    concessions it offered. Again, the jury was instructed on the issue whether the
    comparative sales occurred at about the same time, found by special interrogatory that
    they did, and Volvo does not challenge the district court's instructions. Under the
    -13-
    standard we must apply in reviewing a motion for JAML, we find no basis for
    disturbing the jury's verdict.
    4.     Injury/Damages
    a.     Competitive Injury
    The RPA prohibits price discrimination "where the effect of such
    discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition . . . or to injure, destroy, or
    prevent competition." 5 U.S.C. § 13(a). The RPA "guards against injury to
    competition, not injury to individual competitors." Rose Confections, Inc. v.
    Ambrosia Chocolate Co., 
    816 F.2d 381
    , 387 n.3 (8th Cir. 1987). The RPA does not,
    however, "require that the discriminations must in fact have harmed competition, but
    only that there is a reasonable possibility that they 'may' have such an effect." Corn
    Prods. Ref. Co. v. Fed. Trade Comm'n, 
    324 U.S. 726
    , 742 (1945).
    A plaintiff may demonstrate a reasonable possibility of competitive injury in
    two ways. "First, plaintiff may introduce direct evidence that disfavored competitors
    lost sales or profits as a result of the discrimination." Rose 
    Confections, 816 F.2d at 385
    (citing Falls City Indus., Inc. v. Vanco Beverage, Inc., 
    460 U.S. 428
    , 437-38
    (1983)). In other words, while the RPA does not guard against injury to individual
    competitors, proving injury to individual competitors is one way to demonstrate a
    discriminatory practice likely injured competition. "Second, [a plaintiff] can show
    that the favored competitor received a substantial price reduction over a substantial
    period of time, which gives rise to a permissible inference of competitive injury." 
    Id. (citing Fed.
    Trade Comm'n v. Morton Salt Co., 
    334 U.S. 37
    , 50-51(1948)). Volvo
    argues Reeder failed to demonstrate a reasonable possibility of competitive injury
    because Reeder did not prove the lower concessions Volvo granted to other dealers
    drew sales away from Reeder. We disagree.
    -14-
    The evidence presented by Reeder was sufficient for the jury to conclude
    Volvo's discriminatory concessions resulted in lost profits and sales to Reeder and
    other dealers, and that favored competitors received substantial price reductions over
    a substantial period of time. As stated above, Volvo acknowledged in December
    1997 that it wanted to cut the number of its dealers in half as part of its "Volvo
    Vision." At trial, Volvo acknowledged it had, in fact, succeeded in reducing the
    numbers of its dealers. While admitting 1998 was a good market for the sale of heavy
    trucks overall and 1999 was Volvo's "record year," App. 1340, Volvo nevertheless
    sent approximately twenty termination letters to Volvo dealers in 1999 and early
    2000, and placed another twenty or so dealers on probation during the same time
    period. From this evidence, the jury could properly infer Volvo's intent to reduce the
    number of its dealers manifested itself in the discriminatory concession practices.
    Reeder also presented evidence that it lost profits and sales as a result of
    Volvo's price concession practices. For example, in the head-to-head competition
    with Southwest Missouri Truck Center for the Hiland Dairy contract, Reeder lost
    gross profits of $30,000. On the Lane Freight sale, one of the four sales-to-sales
    comparisons Reeder presented to prove its purchaser status, Reeder lost gross profits
    of $52,120. Reeder also presented evidence from which the jury could conclude
    Volvo's discriminatory practice cost Reeder all future sales to Lane Freight. Reeder's
    evidence showed it lost gross profits on the other sales-to-sales comparisons as well.
    Reeder showed its sales of Volvo trucks had been solid prior to the period of
    Volvo's price discrimination (1996-2000). During the period of discrimination,
    Reeder's sales decreased substantially and its profit margins were lower despite
    increased sales efforts. In all, Reeder's gross profits fell from $165,499 in 1996 to
    $26,327 in 2000. At the same time, favored dealers' sales and overall market sales
    stayed strong. Based on this evidence, the jury could reasonably conclude Reeder's
    average gross profit was lower than the average of favored Volvo dealers because
    Volvo discriminated against Reeder in its price concessions.
    -15-
    Reeder also presented evidence that Volvo's practice extended over a
    substantial period of time (1996-2000). In addition, the evidence established that
    dealer profit margins were narrow during that time. Thus, the jury could reasonably
    conclude even small differences in price concessions had a substantial impact on
    competition.
    b.     Actual Injury
    Although Reeder only needed to prove competitive injury may result to
    establish a violation of 15 U.S.C. § 13(a), it had to make some showing of actual
    injury to itself to recover treble damages under 15 U.S.C. § 15(a). See, e.g., J.F.
    Feeser, Inc. v. Serv-A-Portion, Inc., 
    909 F.2d 1524
    , 1539-40 (3d Cir. 1990)
    (discussing the difference between demonstrating competitive injury under § 13(a)
    and proving actual injury under § 15(a)). Volvo argues Reeder did not show actual
    injury because Reeder offered too few examples of Volvo's discriminatory practices,
    there was no evidence the favored dealers sold the trucks to end-users at lower retail
    prices, and no evidence the end users selected the favored dealers' bids because of the
    lower prices. We believe Volvo construes too narrowly the requirements for proving
    actual injury.
    In addressing whether Reeder proved it was actually injured by Volvo's price
    discrimination, Volvo would have us limit our analysis to the one instance of direct
    head-to-head competition with Southwest Missouri Truck Center for the Hiland Dairy
    contract and the four sales-to-sales comparisons Reeder offered to prove its purchaser
    status, while disregarding all the other evidence offered to prove actual injury. We
    believe such an approach is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's teachings, both
    with respect to the role circumstantial evidence plays in RPA claims and the scope
    of injury to be remedied by the RPA.
    -16-
    Reeder presented other substantial evidence to prove competitive and actual
    injury. Reeder presented numerous instances of its unsuccessful sales due to Volvo's
    failure to grant requested price concessions, and evidence of Volvo's admitted
    intentions to reduce the number of its dealers. Indeed, Reeder showed Volvo
    successfully reduced the number of its dealers and placed many more on probation
    during a "record" sales period. Reeder presented evidence that its own sales and
    profits were substantially reduced during this boom in the heavy truck industry,
    despite an increase in its own sales efforts. From this evidence the jury could
    reasonably infer Volvo's discriminatory practice and Reeder's injuries extended
    beyond the five specific head-to-head and sales-to-sales comparisons.
    In Perkins v. Standard Oil Co., 
    395 U.S. 642
    (1969), the Supreme Court
    discussed the role of circumstantial evidence in proving the causal connection
    between a defendant's discriminatory pricing practices and the plaintiff's damages.
    Perkins, a gasoline retailer, alleged price discrimination between itself and a
    competitor, Regal, another gasoline retailer far down the distribution ladder from
    Standard. There was no direct evidence Regal sold the gasoline to its customers at
    lower retail prices than did Perkins because of the price discrimination, and no direct
    evidence Regal's customers selected their gasoline over Perkins's because of lower
    prices. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court upheld the jury's verdict against Standard
    and in favor of Perkins based on circumstantial evidence.
    If there is sufficient evidence in the record to support an inference of
    causation, the ultimate conclusion as to what that evidence proves is for
    the jury. Here the trial judge properly charged the jury that Perkins had
    the burden of showing that any damage to his business was proximately
    caused by Standard's price discriminations and there was substantial
    evidence from which the jury could infer causation. There was evidence
    that Signal received a lower price from Standard than did Perkins, that
    this price advantage was passed on, at least in part, to Regal, and that
    Regal was thereby able to undercut Perkins' price on gasoline.
    Furthermore, there was evidence that Perkins repeatedly complained to
    -17-
    Standard officials that the discriminatory price advantage given Signal
    was being passed down to Regal and evidence that Standard officials
    were aware that Perkins' business was in danger of being destroyed by
    Standard's discriminatory practices. This evidence is sufficient to
    sustain the jury's award of damages under the Robinson-Patman Act.
    
    Perkins, 395 U.S. at 648-49
    (internal citation omitted).
    Likewise, here there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could infer
    favored dealers received lower prices from Volvo than did Reeder, and this price
    advantage allowed other dealers to undercut Reeder's prices, hurting Reeder's sales
    and profits. There was also evidence Volvo was aware this discriminatory practice
    could destroy Reeder's business; indeed, the elimination of some dealers like Reeder
    appeared to be Volvo's intent. This is precisely the type of injury the antitrust laws
    were meant to prevent. See Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc., 
    395 U.S. 100
    , 125 (1969) (permitting causality to be inferred from circumstantial evidence
    where the injury involved was "precisely the type of loss that the claimed violations
    of the antitrust laws would be likely to cause."). Moreover, Reeder was not required
    to prove Volvo's price discrimination was the only reason for its injuries, or the only
    reason for heavy truck customers' purchasing decisions – it was enough that Reeder
    showed the price discrimination was a "material" cause of its injuries. 
    Id. at 114
    n.9
    ("It is enough that the illegality is shown to be a material cause . . . a plaintiff need
    not exhaust all possible alternative sources of injury in fulfilling his burden of
    proving compensable injury under § 4.")
    Volvo would also have us limit the scope of Reeder's injury to the four sales-to-
    sales comparisons which Reeder presented to prove its purchaser status. The
    Supreme Court has, however, eschewed an approach whereby damages are
    mechanically calculated simply by comparing the price differentials of a defendant's
    actual transactions between favored and disfavored competitors. "Damages resulting
    from illegal price discrimination may not be measured merely by determining the
    -18-
    overcharge to the disfavored buyer, i.e., the excess paid by disfavored buyer for the
    goods it purchased." Hasbrouck v. Texaco, Inc., 
    842 F.2d 1034
    , 1043 (9th Cir. 1988)
    (citing J. Truett Payne Co. v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 
    451 U.S. 557
    , 557 (1981)).
    Instead, Reeder had both the burden and opportunity of proving damages "on the
    basis of plaintiff's estimate of sales it could have made absent the violation." J. Truett
    
    Payne, 451 U.S. at 565
    (citing Zenith 
    Radio, 395 U.S. at 123-24
    ). Thus, Reeder was
    entitled to present evidence beyond the price differential of the four specific sales-to-
    sales comparisons it offered to prove its purchaser status, and the jury was free to
    award damages beyond those transactions.
    c.     Calculation of Damages
    Finally, Volvo challenges the proof Reeder presented to calculate the amount
    of its damages. We reject this challenge. Having established an actual injury caused
    by Volvo's antitrust violations, Reeder will not be held to stringent burdens in
    proving the actual amount of those injuries. See Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures,
    Inc., 
    327 U.S. 251
    , 264-66 (1946). The jury may not render its verdict based on
    speculation or guesswork, but it may make a just and reasonable estimate or
    approximation. 
    Id. [D]amage issues
    in these cases are rarely susceptible of the kind of
    concrete, detailed proof of injury which is available in other contexts.
    The Court has repeatedly held that in the absence of more precise proof,
    the factfinder may conclude as a matter of just and reasonable inference
    from the proof of defendants' wrongful acts and their tendency to injure
    plaintiffs' business, and from the evidence of the decline in prices,
    profits and values, not shown to be attributable to other causes, that
    defendants' wrongful acts had caused damage to the plaintiffs.
    Zenith 
    Radio, 395 U.S. at 123-24
    (citations, internal quotations omitted).
    -19-
    Underpinning most of Volvo's complaints about the calculation of damages is
    its claim the district court erred in permitting one of Reeder's co-owners, Bill Heck,
    to testify about Reeder's lost profits and the value of the company. We note the
    district court has broad discretion in determining whether to admit lay or expert
    testimony, Anderson v. Raymond Corp., 
    340 F.3d 520
    , 523 (8th Cir. 2003); United
    States v. Oliver, 
    908 F.2d 260
    , 263-64 (8th Cir. 1990), and we find no abuse of
    discretion under these circumstances where Reeder laid the proper foundation to
    show Heck's knowledge, as a business owner, of the business's value and its lost
    profits. See Mississippi Chem. Corp. v. Dresser-Rand Co., 
    287 F.3d 359
    , 373 (5th
    Cir. 2002) (collecting cases allowing lost profit testimony where the witness has
    direct knowledge of the business accounts underlying the profit calculation).
    Volvo attacks as pure speculation Heck's use of a multiplier in calculating the
    value of the Volvo franchise to Reeder. Heck testified multipliers were often used
    to calculate the value of truck franchises and he selected one based on his knowledge
    of current practices. Volvo's own experts confirmed multipliers are thus used. The
    only difference in opinion between Volvo's experts and Heck was which multiplier
    to use. Volvo's experts would have used a multiplier of two, three or four, while
    Heck used five. We find Volvo's challenge to Heck's use of a multiplier to be without
    merit. Volvo does not argue why five in particular was speculative, only that Heck
    had no basis for choosing it. Indeed, Volvo's experts did not testify five was
    improper, only that they would have used a lower multiplier. We conclude it was for
    the jury to determine the relative credibility of the witnesses, and resolve this conflict
    in the evidence. Furthermore, the district court instructed the jury it could not award
    damages based on the value of the lost franchise, and could use that figure only for
    guidance in determining Reeder's lost profits. Volvo did not object to that
    instruction, and does not aver error in the instruction.
    Reeder further calculated its damages by subtracting its actual sales in the years
    of Volvo's violations (1996-2000) from the sales objectives set by Volvo for those
    -20-
    same years. The result represented the number of trucks Reeder argued it would
    have sold absent Volvo's wrongdoing. That number was then multiplied by Reeder's
    average gross profits per truck. Reeder also provided alternative evidence of the
    average gross profits of all Volvo dealers, which when multiplied by the estimated
    number of lost truck sales, yielded amounts similar to the results obtained when
    subtracting actual sales from Volvo's sales objectives. From these estimates Reeder
    subtracted certain expenses, including commissions to salespersons and advertising.
    Thus, the jury had several reasonable figures from which to choose in calculating
    damages.
    Volvo argues Volvo's sales objectives bore no reasonable relationship to
    Reeder's lost profits, so it was improper to compare the sales objectives to Reeder's
    actual sales. But Volvo's own witnesses testified its sales objectives were reasonable.
    The objectives were calculated using market data and were intended by Volvo to
    represent a reasonable "minimum performance" expectation of each individual
    franchise. It was further established at trial Reeder met, and sometimes exceeded,
    Volvo's objectives before the onset of the alleged price discrimination period.
    In sum, we believe Volvo's argument essentially reduces to a demand there be
    a stronger causal link proved between every dollar of damages awarded and Volvo's
    antitrust violations. We conclude that argument is inconsistent with the relaxed
    standard applied to a plaintiff's ascertainment of damages, after having established
    actual injury. E.g., 
    Bigelow, 327 U.S. at 264-66
    . The relationship between likely
    sales and actual sales is precisely the relationship that should guide an estimate of
    damages in a price discrimination action. It is imprecise to be sure, but that
    imprecision cuts against Volvo. See J. Truett 
    Payne, 451 U.S. at 566
    ("[I]t does not
    'come with very good grace' for the wrongdoer to insist on specific and certain proof
    of the injury which it has itself inflicted.") (quoting 
    Bigelow, 327 U.S. at 264-65
    ).
    -21-
    B.    The AFPA Claim
    Volvo contends the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over
    Reeder's AFPA claim. Volvo advances several arguments to support this premise.
    First, because Reeder's allegations concern the franchise relationship between a motor
    vehicle dealer and manufacturer, Volvo claims the allegations are governed by the
    Arkansas Motor Vehicle Commission Act (AMVCA), Ark. Code Ann. §§ 23-112-101
    through 23-112-706, rather than the AFPA. Volvo contends the AMVCA is more
    specific than the AFPA as applied to the franchise relationship involved here, and
    therefore controls. Next, Volvo argues Reeder must exhaust its administrative
    remedies before the Arkansas Motor Vehicle Commission (Commission) before filing
    a civil action for a violation of the AMVCA. Finally, Volvo contends the AMVCA
    requires Reeder to prove a "willful" violation of its provisions before recovering
    damages in a civil action, see Ark. Code Ann. § 23-112-05, and Reeder's sole source
    of statutory remedies are comprised in the AMVCA's remedy provisions. We
    disagree with Volvo's ultimate contention — that the district court lacked jurisdiction
    — because we disagree with each of Volvo's arguments.
    Volvo's first argument is the AMVCA is more specific than the AFPA as
    applied to the franchise relationship between a motor vehicle dealer and
    manufacturer, and because the two statutory schemes conflict, the AMVCA should
    govern. See, e.g., Valley Nat'l Bank of Ariz. v. Stroud, 
    711 S.W.2d 785
    , 786 (Ark.
    1986) ("In statutory construction where specific expressions conflict with general
    expressions, the rule is to give greater effect to the specific expression.").
    We have doubts about which of the two statutory schemes is more specific as
    applied to the franchise relationship between a motor vehicle dealer and a
    manufacturer. The AMVCA is a regulatory statute governing the relationships not
    only between dealers and manufacturers, but also salespersons, lessors/lessees,
    distributors and their representatives, factories and their representatives, and others
    -22-
    in the motor vehicle industry. The AMVCA empowers the Commission to set
    professional standards and grant and revoke licenses. Thus, while the AFPA is
    broader in the sense it covers all franchise relationships, not just those involving
    motor vehicle dealers and manufacturers, the AMVCA is broader in that it covers all
    relationships in vehicle sales, not just franchise relationships. The relationship
    between Volvo and Reeder falls in the confluence of the two statutes.
    We need not resolve which of the statutes is more specific than the other as
    applied to this fact pattern, however, because we conclude Volvo's first argument fails
    based on the application of other principles. Clearly, both statutory schemes relate
    to the subject matter of franchise relationships between motor vehicle dealers and
    manufacturers, and thus we must read them "in a harmonious manner if possible."
    City of Fort Smith v. Tate, 
    844 S.W.2d 356
    , 359 (Ark. 1993) ("All statutes on the
    same subject are in pari materia and must be construed together and made to stand
    if capable of being reconciled."). Arkansas law further directs us to "view[] them
    [i.e., the two statutory schemes,] as a single system, and giv[e] effect to the general
    purpose of the system." Arkansas County v. Desha County, 
    27 S.W.3d 379
    , 383
    (Ark. 2000).
    The AMVCA specifically allows for the courts, not the Commission, to award
    damages and attorney fees to a licensee harmed by willful violations of the statutory
    scheme. See Ark. Code Ann. § 23-112-105. Likewise, the AFPA provides a civil
    remedy for franchisees harmed by franchisors acting in a commercially unreasonable
    manner. See Ark. Code. Ann. §§ 4-72-206 (making it unlawful for franchisors to
    "refuse to deal with a franchise in a commercially reasonable manner") & 4-72-208
    (providing a private right of action to franchisees harmed by a violation of the
    AFPA). Thus, we have little trouble concluding both statutory schemes give persons
    or entities harmed by a violation of the statutes the right to sue in court, and at least
    one purpose of the overall system seems to be to protect persons or entities like
    Reeder from persons or entities like Volvo. We therefore find no conflict between
    -23-
    the remedies provisions of the two statutes, and see no reason why a
    franchisee/licensee like Reeder could not choose to pursue remedies under either
    statutory scheme.
    Furthermore, assuming arguendo a conflict between the two remedial statutes,
    we believe AFPA's would control because it was enacted two years after the
    AMVCA. See Kyle v. State, 
    849 S.W.2d 935
    , 937 (Ark. 1993) ("The settled rule of
    statutory construction is that if two legislative acts relating to the same subject are in
    conflict with each other, the later act controls."). The AFPA refers to three specific
    franchise situations where the Arkansas legislature directed it would not apply. See
    Ark. Code Ann. § 4-72-203 (indicating the AFPA does not apply to "franchises
    subject to the provisions of § 4-702-401 et seq. and § 4-72-501 et seq., or which are
    subject to the Federal Trade Commission [Franchise Rule], 16 C.F.R. 436.1 et seq.").
    Notably absent is a reference to franchises subject to the provisions of the AMVCA.
    Because the Arkansas legislature expressly noted those situations where the AFPA
    would not apply, we conclude it would have expressly referred to the AMVCA if it
    intended franchises covered by both Acts to be limited to the remedies available
    under the AMVCA. See Chem-Ash, Inc. v. Ark. Power and Light Co., 
    751 S.W.2d 353
    , 354 (Ark. 1988) ("It is fundamental statutory construction law that the express
    designation of one thing may properly be construed to mean the exclusion of
    another.").
    Volvo's next argument is that Reeder must exhaust the administrative remedies
    established by the AMVCA before filing this civil action against Volvo. Again, we
    disagree. The Commission's power is limited to granting injunctions,4 revoking
    4
    Ark. Code Ann. § 23-112-104.
    -24-
    licenses,5 or imposing fines payable to the state treasury,6 so the Commission could
    not award damages to Reeder. Exhaustion of administrative remedies is not required
    if those remedies are inadequate. See, e.g., Cummings v. Big Mac Mobile Homes,
    Inc., 
    980 S.W.2d 550
    , 552 (Ark. 1998) (holding plaintiffs not required to exhaust
    remedies with the Arkansas Manufactured Home Commission when the Commission
    only provided damages for the cost of repairs and the plaintiffs asserted their mobile
    home was beyond repair); Delta Sch. of Commerce, Inc. v. Harris, 
    839 S.W.2d 203
    ,
    207 (Ark. 1992) ("Inadequate administrative remedies need not be exhausted.").
    Finally, since the AMVCA requires Reeder to prove a willful violation of its
    provisions before recovering damages in a civil action, Volvo posits Reeder should
    not be entitled to recover damages under the AFPA's less-stringent standard. As
    stated above, however, we see no conflict between the two statutory schemes. And
    as we noted, the Arkansas legislature specifically mentioned those situations where
    the AFPA would not apply and did not refer to franchise situations governed by the
    AMVCA. From this we discern no legislative intent to limit the remedies of motor
    vehicle franchisees to the more stringent standard required by the AMVCA.
    In sum, the AMVCA did not impose an impediment to Reeder's suit for
    damages under the AFPA, and the district court had jurisdiction over this matter.
    III
    We affirm the judgment entered in the district court in all respects.
    5
    Ark. Code Ann. § 23-112-308.
    6
    Ark. Code Ann. §§ 23-112-205 & 23-112-309.
    -25-
    HANSEN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    Although I do not disagree with the court's resolution of the state law issue, I
    write separately to express my view that Reeder has failed to make out a claim under
    the Robinson-Patman Act. Even viewing all of the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the verdict, I conclude that Reeder cannot prove the necessary elements
    to recover treble damages in this case. Specifically, Reeder has not proven a violation
    of § 13(a) because the facts fail to show injury or likelihood of injury to actual
    competition between Reeder and the "favored" Volvo dealers. Furthermore, even if
    we assume that Volvo violated § 13(a), there is absolutely no indication that any such
    violation was the cause of Reeder's injury, for the purpose of recovering damages
    under § 15(a). I therefore respectfully dissent from Section II(A) of the court's
    opinion.
    There is little doubt that the facts of this case fail to fit neatly into the
    framework that courts have established in analyzing Robinson-Patman Act
    secondary-line claims. Much of my disagreement in this case stems from what I
    perceive as the court's attempt to fit a square peg into a round hole. Traditional RPA
    cases involve sellers and purchasers that carry inventory or deal in fungible goods.
    By contrast, the parties in this case operate in a unique marketplace where special-
    order products are sold to individual, pre-identified customers only after competitive
    bidding. By its very nature, this process will never produce the kind of competition
    the RPA was designed to protect because it will never result in the type of two-
    purchase transaction that itself creates a market for the goods that are sold. Indeed,
    where, at the time of the end purchase, only one possible seller and one possible
    buyer exist, competition is totally absent. It is the nature of competitive bidding, not
    price discrimination, that makes it so.
    The court properly recognizes that a competitive bidding situation will never
    involve two "purchasers," and thus always will fall outside of the purview of the
    -26-
    RPA. Despite this determination, however, the court goes on to conclude that
    Reeder's purchases with respect to four transactions give it "purchaser status" as to
    separate instances in which it did not make a purchase, and therefore was not in fact
    a purchaser. I disagree with this proposition.            Reeder cannot piggyback
    nonpurchaser transactions onto purchaser transactions for purposes of recovering
    under the RPA. My concern does not stem from a strict adherence to the two-
    purchase requirement, but rather from my belief that "purchaser status" is inextricably
    intertwined with the existence of actual competition and the possible threat thereto.
    Because my primary objection to the court's opinion is that it overlooked this
    important aspect of actual competition, I turn next to that issue.
    Despite the fact that Reeder operates at the same functional level as the
    "favored" Volvo dealers and that they may do business in the same or overlapping
    geographic areas, I nevertheless conclude that Reeder has failed to prove that it was
    in actual competition with the "favored" Volvo dealers. There certainly may exist a
    national market in which heavy-truck dealers compete to receive the opportunity to
    bid on potential sales to customers. The Volvo dealers in this case very well may
    have competed against each other in this market on a regular basis. However, any
    difference in price that Volvo eventually may quote to a dealer who actually bids on
    a potential sale has no effect on this market. The evidence shows that an end user's
    decision to request a bid from a particular dealer or to allow a particular dealer to bid
    is controlled by such factors as an existing relationship, geography, reputation, and
    cold calling or other marketing strategies initiated by individual dealers. Once
    bidding begins, however, the relevant market becomes limited to the needs and
    demands of a particular end user, with only a handful of dealers competing for the
    ultimate sale. Cf. FTC v. Fred Meyer, Inc., 
    390 U.S. 341
    , 349 (1968) (Section 2(d)
    "reaches only discrimination between customers competing for resales at the same
    functional level...."). Thus, although Reeder and other "favored" dealers may have
    competed generally with each other in the larger market for obtaining bids, there is
    evidence of only two occasions where Reeder competed with a "favored" Volvo
    -27-
    dealer for an actual sale. Reeder's attempt to compare a sale that it made to one end
    user to a sale made by a "favored" Volvo dealer to another end user with whom
    Reeder had no relationship simply is not relevant to proving a violation of the RPA
    because there was no actual competition between the two dealers at the time of the
    sales to the separate and different end users.
    Without proof of actual competition, Reeder cannot demonstrate a reasonable
    possibility of competitive injury. Indeed, where alleged lost sales or profits were not
    diverted from Reeder to "favored" Volvo dealers, but rather to other non-Volvo
    dealers, it is unclear how any difference in price offered by Volvo to its two dealers
    could possibly injure actual competition between them. See Falls City 
    Indus., 460 U.S. at 437-38
    (finding competitive injury based on direct evidence of sales diverted
    away from plaintiff to a favored customer). Even if Volvo's calculation of
    concessions caused Reeder to lose profits or sales, there is no violation of the RPA
    if there is no injury to competition between Reeder and the "favored" Volvo dealers.
    Furthermore, Volvo can successfully rebut any Morton Salt inference of injury to
    competition between Reeder and the "favored" Volvo dealers because the evidence
    clearly establishes that none of the lost sales or profits was diverted from Reeder to
    those "favored" dealers. Although Volvo's conduct may have injured Reeder's ability
    to compete with non-Volvo dealers, Reeder must look outside the RPA for any relief
    for this claimed injury. Contrary to the court's assertion, such an injury is not the type
    of injury to competition that the RPA was intended to prevent.
    It is my view that an injury to competition can be proven only where the factors
    necessary to state an RPA claim all are present in the same relevant transaction. To
    the extent that the court looks for the existence of one factor in one transaction and
    the existence of another factor in a second transaction, I conclude that the proof in
    this case is too tenuous and requires too many inferences piled atop inferences to
    reach the court's result.
    -28-
    Nevertheless, even if we assume that Volvo violated § 13(a) of the RPA, I
    would reverse Reeder's RPA damage award because Reeder has failed to prove that
    it was actually injured by Volvo's price discrimination as required by § 15(a). See
    J. Truett 
    Payne, 451 U.S. at 562
    ("To recover treble damages, then, a plaintiff must
    make some showing of actual injury attributable to something the antitrust laws were
    designed to prevent."). Although Reeder may have established that it lost sales and
    profits to other non-Volvo competitors, there can be no inference of actual injury for
    the purpose of the RPA without some evidence (and there is none in this record) that
    the discriminatory pricing caused those sales and profits to be diverted from Reeder
    to another Volvo dealer who received more favorable terms from Volvo.
    Reeder relies on four different scenarios to demonstrate actual injury and to
    calculate its damages. First, Reeder points to instances in which it bid unsuccessfully
    against non-Volvo competitors because Volvo failed to quote Reeder the same
    concession that it gave to a "favored" Volvo dealer in a separate sale to a different
    end user. Second, Reeder cites instances in which it bid successfully against non-
    Volvo competitors but did not make as much in profit on the successful deal because
    it did not receive the same concession that a "favored" Volvo dealer received in an
    entirely separate sale to an entirely different end user. Third, Reeder relies on the
    transaction involving Tommy Davidson in which Reeder and another Volvo dealer,
    who allegedly received a better concession quote from Volvo, both lost the ultimate
    sale to a non-Volvo competitor. Finally, Reeder cites to the deal involving Hiland
    Dairy in which Reeder and another "favored" Volvo dealer both received equal
    concession quotes from Volvo and submitted equal bids to the same end user.
    Months later after Volvo's prices had increased, Hiland Dairy placed its order with
    the "favored" Volvo dealer for reasons unrelated to price, but insisted on receiving
    the original lower price. The other dealer then requested an additional concession in
    order to offer Hiland Dairy its original quoted price. Notably, Hiland Dairy
    purchased all of its trucks both before and after this transaction from the same
    "favored" Volvo dealer. More notably, there is nothing in the evidence to show that
    -29-
    had Hiland Dairy made the same request of Reeder that Volvo would not have
    "favored" Reeder with the same concession in order to get the business.
    Although it is possible that Reeder lost sales or profits to non-Volvo dealers
    because it did not receive a sufficiently high concession from Volvo in the first three
    scenarios, the difference in concessions offered to Reeder and the "favored" Volvo
    dealers did not cause the lost sales or profits on those deals. In order to prove that the
    § 13(a) violation caused its injuries, Reeder essentially must show that absent a price
    difference, it would not have lost those sales or profits. However, even if Volvo had
    not offered the "favored" dealers greater concessions, i.e., not discriminated, there
    still is no proof that Reeder would have made the sales. Furthermore, as to the sales
    that Reeder did make, it would be improper to calculate lost profits based on what
    Reeder otherwise characterizes as illegal price discrimination.
    The fact that the sales and profits were not diverted from Reeder to "favored"
    Volvo dealers demonstrates not only a lack of causation of actual injury under §
    15(a), but also seriously undermines our court's conclusion that there is any likelihood
    of injury to competition between Reeder and the "favored" Volvo dealers. Reeder
    alleges that Volvo intended to put Reeder out of business. While intent may be
    relevant to prove a primary-line violation, see Lomar Wholesale Grocery, Inc. v.
    Dieter's Gourmet, 
    824 F.2d 582
    , 595-96 (8th Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 
    484 U.S. 1010
    (1988), it offers nothing in this case. At most, the facts show that Volvo acted
    unreasonably in failing to give Reeder sufficient concessions to allow it to compete
    with other non-Volvo dealers. While such conduct may very well give rise to some
    sort of liability under state law, I conclude that it does not support a judgment for
    treble damages under the Robinson-Patman Act. I respectfully dissent.
    ______________________________
    -30-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 02-2462

Filed Date: 7/12/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (38)

Kyle v. State , 312 Ark. 274 ( 1993 )

Chem-Ash, Inc. v. Arkansas Power & Light Co. , 296 Ark. 83 ( 1988 )

delong-equipment-company-cross-appellee-v-washington-mills-electro , 990 F.2d 1186 ( 1993 )

Cummings v. Big Mac Mobile Homes, Inc. , 335 Ark. 216 ( 1998 )

Arkansas County v. Desha County , 342 Ark. 135 ( 2000 )

City of Fort Smith v. Tate , 311 Ark. 405 ( 1993 )

jf-feeser-inc-and-juniata-foods-inc-v-serv-a-portion-inc , 909 F.2d 1524 ( 1990 )

American Can Co. v. Bruce's Juices, Inc. , 187 F.2d 919 ( 1951 )

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Mississippi Chemical Corp. v. Dresser-Rand Co. , 287 F.3d 359 ( 2002 )

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United States v. Ladonna Kay Oliver , 908 F.2d 260 ( 1990 )

Thomas M. Godfrey v. Pulitzer Publishing Co. , 276 F.3d 405 ( 2002 )

Sherry Anderson v. Raymond Corporation , 340 F.3d 520 ( 2003 )

Richard M. Jones v. Todd v. Swanson , 341 F.3d 723 ( 2003 )

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