This appeal involves claims of price discrimination, 15 U.S.C. § 13(a) (1994); 10 L.P.R.A. § 263 (1976), monopolization, 15 U.S.C. § 2 (1994); 10 L.P.R.A. § 260 (1976), and Puerto Rico law tort, 31 L.P.R.A. § 5141 (1976), brought against appellant Caribbean Petroleum Corp. by appellee Coastal Fuels of Puerto Rico, Inc. After a jury trial, the district court entered judgment for $5,000,-000 — $1.5 million in antitrust damages trebled plus $500,000 in tort damages. CAPE-CO seeks that the judgment of the district court be reversed and judgment be granted to CAPECO on all counts, or alternatively, that the judgment be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial. We affirm the price discrimination and Puerto Rico law tort verdicts, as well as the tort damage verdict. However, we reverse the monopolization verdict, vacate the antitrust damages verdict, and accordingly remand for further proceedings on price discrimination damages.
BACKGROUND
We relate the evidentiary background in the light most favorable to the jury verdicts.
See Kerr-Selgas v. American
Airlines,
Inc.,
Coastal Fuels of Puerto Rico, Inc. (“Coastal”) was formed in 1989 as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Coastal Fuels Marketing, Inc. (“CFMI”), a company that ran marine fuel operations in numerous ports using a staff of sales agents in Miami, Florida. Caribbean Petroleum Corp. (“CAPECO”) owns and operates a refinery in Bayamón, Puerto Rico, which produces a number of fuel products, as well as residual fuel. A principal use of residual fuel is in the production of “bunker fuel,” which is used by cruise ships and other ocean-going vessels outfitted with internal combustion or steam engines.
At trial, Coastal introduced testimony and letters showing that CAPECO had commit
In September 1991, CAPECO agreed to charge Coastal prices based on a formula involving the previous Thursday/Friday New York market postings, minus discounts that varied by volume. These prices were to cover the six month period from October 1991 to March 1992. Unknown to Coastal, CAPECO was almost simultaneously offering Coastal’s two competitors in San Juan Harbor, Caribbean Fuel OÜ Trading, Iric. (“Caribbean”) and Harbor Fuel Services, Inc. (“Hаrbor”), new contracts that gave Caribbean and Harbor bigger discounts from the formula price than Coastal received. 1 Trial evidence introduced by CAPECO’s own expert witness quantified the total price discrimination in favor of Caribbean and Harbor as $682,451.78 for the period from October 1991 to April 1992.
Coastal filed this suit in May of 1992 when it learned of CAPECO’s price discrimination against it. This court affirmed the district court’s denial of a preliminary injunction requiring that CAPECO end its price discrimination.
See Coastal Fuels of Puerto Rico, Inc. v. Caribbean Petroleum Corp.,
Additionally, Coastal presented evidence that, while throughout this period CAPECO would from time to time inform Coastal that it had no fuel available, in fact, CAPECO had available fuel. Coastal also presented evidence that it was discriminated against in terms of the quality of fuel that it received from CAPECO. Finally, on March 31, 1993, CAPECO informed Coastal in writing that it would not sell any more product to Coastal, and shortly thereafter, Coastal went out of business.
The case was tried to a jury on claims (1) that CAPECO discriminated in price in violation of Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 730 (1914) (current version at 15 U.S.C. § 13(a)), as amended by the Robinson-Pat-man Act, 49 Stat. 1526 (1936), and in violation of Section 263(a) of Title 10 of the Laws of Puerto Rico; (2) that CAPECO monopolized trade or commerce in violation of Section 2 of the Sherman Act and Section 260 of Title 10 of the Laws of Puerto Rico; (3) that CAPE-CO violated Section 5141 of Title 31 of the Puerto Rico Civil Code by engaging in tor-tious conduct that injured Coastal; and (4) that CAPECO committed a breach of contract in violation of Sections 3371 et seq. of Title 31 of the Puerto Rico Civil Code. As reflected in the jury’s answers to the Special Interrogatories, the jury found for Coastal on the first three of these claims, but found for CAPECO on the breach of contract claim. The jury awarded damages of $1,500,000 for the antitrust violations combined and $500,-0QP for the Puerto Rico tort violation. The antitrust damages were trebled, see 15 U.S.C. § 15(a), bringing the total award to $5,000,000.
CAPECO argues for a reversal of the district court’s judgment, or alternatively, for a new trial. We address the arguments for reversal first.
I. Arguments for Reversal
The first set of issues involves the district court’s denial of CAPECO’s motions for judgment as a matter of law under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50. With respect to matters of law, our review is
de novo. Sandy River Nursing Care v. Aetna Casualty,
Seeking judgment as a matter of law, CA-PECO has raised a set of issues on appeal that concern the application of federal and Puerto Rico law on price discrimination and monopoly, as well as Puerto Rico tort law, to the facts of this case. With respect to these issues, we review the court’s decision
de novo,
using the same stringent decisional standards that controlled the district court.
See Sullivan v. National Football League,
A. Price Discrimination
Section 2(a) of the Clayton Act, amended in 1936 by the Robinson-Patman Act, makes it
unlawful for any person ... 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, ... 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. ...
15 U.S.C. § 13(a). A pair of sales at different prices makes out a
prima facie
case.
See Falls City Indus., Inc. v. Vanco Beverage, Inc.,
Section 2(a) includes two offenses that differ substantially, but are covered by the same statutory language. A “primary-fine” violation occurs where the discriminating seller’s price discrimination adversely impacts competition with the seller’s direct competitors.
See, e.g., Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
We address first CAPECO’s contention that the district court erred in treating this case as one of secondary-fine price discrimination rather than primary-line price discrimination. Specifically, CAPECO protests the district court’s instruction to the jury that injury to competition among competing purchaser-resellers may be inferred from
We do not consider the argument that this is a primary-line case, because CAPECO has chosen to make this argument for the first time on appeal. While CAPECO did object to the
Morton Salt
instruction at the district court, that objection was directed at the use of the word “infer” couched in a generalized attack on the instruction as suggesting a presumption not borne out by case law.
2
We have noted before that “Rule 51
3
means what it says: the grounds for objection must be stated ‘distinctly’ after the charge to give the judge an opportunity to correct his [or her] error.”
Linn v. Andover Newton Theological School, Inc.,
As a result, we analyze this case as one of secondary-line discrimination. Thus, the theory of injury is that CAPECO sold bunker fuel to Coastal at an unfavorable price relative to Harbor and Caribbean, and consequently, competition between Coastal, Harbor and Caribbean was thereby injured. On appeal, CAPECO makes three arguments based on what it purports to be required elements for Coastal’s price discrimination damages claim: first, that the sales in question were not “in commerce” and so section 2(a)’s prohibitions do not apply; second, that Coastal failed to make the requisite showing of competitive injury to prevail; and third, that Coastal failed to carry its burden of proving actual injury in order to be entitled to an award of money damages.
1. “In Commerce”
CAPECO argues, correctly we conclude, that section 2(a) of the Clayton Act does not apply because in the instant case, neither of the two transactions which evidence the alleged price discrimination crossed a state line.
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Copp Paving Co.,
However, this issue is not dispositive, because the jury found that CAPECO violated the Puerto Rico price discrimination statute, which is identical to Sеction 2(a) except that it contains no interstate commerce requirement.
5
CAPECO has not challenged the district court’s supplemental jurisdiction stemming from Coastal’s Sherman Act claims. The relevant statute states that “in any civil action over which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to claims in the action ... that they form part of the same case or controversy.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367 (1994). In application, “[i]f, considered without regard to their federal or state character, a plaintiffs claims are such that [it] would ordinarily be expected to try them all in one judicial proceeding, then, assuming substan-tiality of the federal issues, there is power in federal courts to hear the whole.”
United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs,
Thus, we conclude that the district court erred in applying section 2(a) of the Clayton Act to the conduct at issue, and accordingly reverse that part of its opinion. However, we find applicable section 263 of the Puerto Rico Anti-Monopoly Act, 10 L.P.R.A. § 263. Because section 263 was patterned after and is almost identical to section 2(a) of the Clayton Act, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act, we look to the jurisprudence interpreting federal law as a guide in applying the statute. 6 Given that the one key difference between the federal and Puerto Rico statutes is the lack of an “in commerce” requirement in the Puerto Rico analogue, we conclude that we should interpret section 263 as intended to extend the provisions of section 2(a) of the Clayton Act to price discrimination within Puerto Rico, the situation which we confront in the instant case. Given the relative lack of applicable section 263 case law and the well-developed jurisprudence concerning Clayton Act section 2(a), we will focus on the latter in assessing the price discrimination claims.
CAPECO’s second argument in support of reversing the price discrimination portion of the judgment is that Coastal failed to demonstrate injury to competition. As noted above, we analyze this case as one of secondary-line price discrimination, and thus Coastal bears the burden of showing injury to competition between Coastal and its rival bunker fuel resellers, Harbor and Caribbean. Addressing the burden of the secondary-line plaintiff, the Supreme Court has stated that
[i]t would greatly handicap effective enforcement of the Act to require testimony to show that which we believe to be self-evident, namely, that there is a “reasonable possibility” that competition may be adversely affected by a practice under which manufacturers and producers sell their goods to some customers substantially cheaper than they sell like goods to the competitors of these customers.
Morton Salt Co.,
CAPECO challenges the district court’s finding of competitive injury in two ways, arguing that the
Morton Salt
rule is no longer good law, or alternatively, that the
Morton Salt
rule was incorrectly applied in this ease. We first address CAPECO’s direct challenge to the vitality of the
Morton Salt
rule, a challenge based on the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Brooke Group,
According to CAPECO, the Supreme Court’s recent emphasis in
Brooke Group
on reconciling the area of price discrimination with other antitrust law requires that we find that the
Morton Salt
rule no longer is good law. CAPECO notes that both primary-line and secondary-line price discrimination are prohibited by the same language of section 2(a) as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act. Furthermore, CAPECO contends that the Supreme Court in
Brooke Group
apparently undercut any reliance on a principled distinction between the aims of section 2 of the Clayton Act and other antitrust laws’ purported emphasis on protecting
“competition,
not
competitors,” Brooke Group,
While CAPECO’s argument has merit, we join the two other circuits that have addressed competitive injury in secondary-line
By contrast, secondary-line discrimination is forbidden by the Robinson-Patman Act, 49 Stat. 1526 (1936), 15 U.S.C. §§ 13-13b, 21a (1988), which amended the original Clayton Act’s price discrimination proscriptions. Congress clearly intended the Robinson-Pat-man Act’s provision to apply only to secondary-line eases, not to primary-line eases.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 2287, 74th Cong., 2d Sess. § 8 (1936),
8
cited in Rebel Oil Co.,
Second, we are persuaded by the reasoning of the Ninth Circuit’s opinion in
Rebel Oil Co.
that the amendment to the Clayton Act effected by the Robinson-Patman Act supports the continued vitality of the
Morton Salt
rule, even in the face of
Brooke Group’s
alteration of standards for primary-line price discrimination. While the Clayton Act only proscribed conduct that may “substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly!!,]” the new law added the following passage: “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.”
See Rebel Oil Co.,
Third, and finally, the holding of the Brooke Group opinion on its face applies only to primary-line eases, not secondary-line cases. As a result, given the legislative history and statutory language distinctions, we will not presume, without more guidance, that the Supreme Court intended in Brooke Group to alter the well-established rule that it adopted in Morton Salt. 9 Thus, we hold that the Morton Salt rule continues to apply to secondary-line injury eases such as the present one.
The
Morton Salt
rule provides that, for the purposes of secondary-line claims under section 2(a), “injury to competition is established prima facie by proof of a substantial price discrimination between competing purchasers over time.”
Falls City Industries v. Vanco Beverage, Inc.,
Here the jury properly inferred prima fa-cie injury to competition since Coastal produced sufficient evidence before the jury to conclude (1) that the discrimination in question was continuous and substantial and (2) that the discrimination occurred in a business where profit margins were low and competition was keen. 4 Von Kalinowski, Antitrust Laws and Trade Regulation § 31.04(1). First, the discrimination lasted all 18 months that Coastal was in business, and always exceeded the five cents per barrel that witnesses testified was competitively significant. Additionally, there was ample testimony that the marine fuel oil business, in which Coastal competed against Caribbean and Harbor, was characterized by thin margins and intense competition. At any rate, on appeal, CAPECO does not make the argument that Coastal failed to produce evidence required for a prima facie showing of injury to competition under the Morton Salt rule.
However, CAPECO argues that the
Morton Salt
inference was undercut by evidence “breaking the causal connection” between CAPECO’s price discrimination and Coastal’s lost sales or profits,
Falls City,
We reject the argument that this evidence rebuts Coastal’s
prima, facie
showing of price discrimination. In reviewing the jury verdict, “[w]e are compelled ... even in a close case, to uphold the verdict unless the facts and inferences, when viewed in a light most favorable to the party for whom the jury held, point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of the movant that a reasonable jury could not have arrived at this conclusion.”
Chedd-Angier Production Co. v. Omni Publications Int’l Ltd.,
Here, neither section 2(a), section 263,
nor
their attendant case law, requires that the price discrimination in question be directly factored into the prices that favored and disfavored purchaser-resellers offered to their customers. Presumably, regardless of whether these costs were factored directly into the рrices that Coastal offered, or were later calculated into Coastal’s bottom line, these costs affected Coastal’s pricing. Certainly, no argument can be made from this evidence alone that bunker fuel costs, no matter when accounted for, were not causally connected to Coastal’s lost profits.
See, e.g., Hasbrouck v. Texaco, Inc.,
3. Actual Injury
CAPECO also contends that Coastal faded to present adequate evidence of actual injury to support the verdict. On appeal, CAPECO does not complain that the court’s instructions to the jury on the actual injury requirement were erroneous. Thus, the only question regarding this issue is whether the evidence that Coastal presented to the jury was adequate to permit a reasonable inference of actual injury.
Although we have concluded that Coastal has proved competitive injury under Title 10, Section 263 of the Laws of Puerto Rico, in order to collect damages as a private plaintiff, Coastal must show that CAPECO’s offense was a “material cause” of injury.
See Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research,
Assuming arguendo that CAPECO correctly claims that Coastal needed to show specific losses of business, CAPECO’s argument fails to persuade us.
10
CAPECO con
CAPECO also contends that because McIntosh’s testimony was bаsed on statements other Coastal employees had made to him, it was both inadmissible hearsay evidence,
see
Fed.R.Evid. 802, and even if admissible, legally insufficient to support a finding of actual injury. In making this argument, CAPECO cites two cases,
Stelwagon Manufacturing Co. v. Tarmac Roofing Systems, Inc.,
Additionally, the Fifth Circuit’s opinion in J. Truett Payne is distinguishable in a significant manner from the instant case. In a preceding Supreme Court opinion, the Court noted that
[although [Payne Co.’s owner] asserted that his salesmen and customers told him that the dealership was being undersold, he admitted that he did not know if his competitors did in fact pass on their lower costs to their customers.
J. Truett Payne, Co. v. Chrysler Motors Corp.,
We conclude that, once admitted, this evidence could have led the jury to reasonably infer actual injury to competition.
B. Monopolization
Section 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 2, condemns “every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize ... any part of the trade or commerce among the several States.” Similarly, Title 10, Section 260 of the Laws of Puerto Rico tracks this language. Claims under this Puerto Rico analogue are to be analyzed in the same manner as claims under section 2 of the Sherman Act.
See R.W. Intern. Corp. v. Welch Food, Inc.,
To determine whether a party has or could acquire monopoly power in a market, “courts have found it necessary to consider the relevant market and the defendant’s ability to lessen or destroy competition in that market.”
Spectrum Sports v. McQuillan,
In its monopolization claim, Coastal argued that CAPECO took steps to drive it out of San Juan Harbor because Coastal is affiliated with a refinery in Aruba. Coastal apparently had the capacity to import the residual oil and diesel into San Juan from Aruba. Coastal also had storage capacity. CAPECO feared, so Coastal’s theory went, that this would allow the refinery in Aruba to compete with CAPECO and threaten CAPECO’s ability to sell its targeted 10,000 barrels of residual oil per day to dealers. Coastal’s argument is that CAPECO, fearing that Coastal’s affiliate posed a compеtitive threat, decided to drive Coastal out by (1) engaging in price discrimination against Coastal, (2) discriminating in the provision of residual oil, (3) discriminating in the quality of the residual oil available, and (4) threatening to cut off plaintiff entirely, eventually doing so.
Coastal successfully argued to the jury that the relevant geographic market was San Juan Harbor, since neither it nor its competitors, Caribbean and Harbor, could practicably obtain supplies in San Juan Harbor from anyone other than CAPECO. Coastal produced evidence that CAPECO made 90% of the sales of bunker fuel to resellers in the San Juan Harbor market — and CAPECO does not dispute this figure on appeal.
CAPECO’s main argument regarding monopoly power is that the choice of San Juan Harbor as the relevant market was incorrect. Instead, it maintains that because the broader market for bunker fuel among cruise ships and other vessels plying the waters of the Caribbean and the southeastern United States constrains the prices CAPECO can charge resellers in San Juan Harbor, the proper geographic market should have been defined to include a much wider area. A larger geographic market would of course lead to a lower figure for the percentage of sales in the market made by CAPECO, likely defeating the monopoly power prong of the monopolization offense.
In assessing CAPECO’s argument, we must bear in mind that “market definition is a question of fact” and “we therefore must affirm the jury’s conclusion unless the record is devoid of evidence upon which the jury might reasonably base its conclusion.”
Weiss v. York Hospital,
In order to show that CAPECO had monopoly power, Coastal was required to show that CAPECO had sufficient market power to raise price by restricting output. IIA Phillip E. Areeda et al.,
Antitrust Law
¶ 501 (1995). “[Substantial market power that concerns antitrust law arises when the defendant (1) can profitably set prices well above its costs and (2) enjoys some protection against [a] rival’s entry or expansion that would erode such supracompetitive prices and profits.”
Id.
Market power can be shown through two types of proof. A plaintiff can either show direct evidence of market power (perhaps by showing actual supracompetitive prices and restricted out
Before determining market share, however, the relevant geographic market must be defined.
11
Although, “[fjinding the relevant market and its structure is not a goal in itself but a surrogate of market power,”
see
Areeda, supra,
¶
531a, “[mjarket definition is crucial.”
Rebel Oil Co.,
A market may be any grouping of sales whose sellers, if unified by a hypothetical cartel or merger, could profitably raise prices significantly above the competitive level. If the sales of other producers substantially constrain the price-increasing ability of the hypothetical cartel, these others are part of the market. Areeda,
supra,
¶ 533b;
see also Rebel Oil Co.,
Coastal and CAPECO have presented two competing conceptions of the relevant market. Coastal argues, and the jury found, 12 that the relevant market was the market for residual oil for bunker fuel in San Juan. Coastal presented evidence that resellers in San Juan (Harbor, Caribbean and Coastal) purchased 90% of their supplies for bunker fuel from CAPECO. CAPECO, in contrast, has argued that the relevant market is broader, consisting of all sales of residual oil for bunker fuel in the Caribbean and Southeastern United States. Our review of the issue leads us to conclude that it would be unreasonable for a juror to infer frоm the evidence presented that the sales of residual oil for bunker fuel outside of San Juan should be excluded from the relevant market.
The residual oil CAPECO sells is blended with diesel into bunker fuel and sold by resellers like Coastal, Harbor and Caribbean to large ocean-going vessels. Residual oil refiners and bunker fuel resellers exist throughout the Caribbean and Southeastern United States. The parties agree that the
Coastal argues that, because of this competition, margins for resellers are razor thin and it is virtually impossible for a reseller in San Juan, like Coastal, to obtain residual oil from anyone other than CAPECO. Transporting supplies from other refineries, such as the refinery Coastal is affiliated with in Aruba, would increase the cost of the fuel to such an extent (transportation costs, import taxes, risk of price changes, and storage costs) that it is not an economically viable alternative. (Of course, this is, it might be observed, somewhat inconsistent with the theory that CAPECO was so afraid of the ‘threat’ from Coastal аnd its Aruba affiliate, that it drove Coastal out of business.) Consequently, Coastal argues, resellers of bunker fuel must purchase from CAPECO when they do business in San Juan. In Coastal’s view, the San Juan resellers’ inability to purchase from suppliers outside of San Juan makes San Juan the relevant market.
We do not agree. The touchstone of market definition is whether a hypothetical monopolist could raise prices.
See Rebel Oil Co.,
Given these facts, the immobility of the resellers does not mean that CAPECO could maximize profits by raising prices significantly above the competitive level. Raising prices in San Juan would repel the ultimate consumers, who would seek other suppliers. The resellers would either stop purchasing residual fuel or cease business, or both. CA-PECO would then lose its ability to sell its residual oil for bunker fuel and this would redound to the benefit of CAPECO’s competitors. While under most circumstances the immobility of the resellers would be of considerable importance in defining the market, it does not control here where the mobility of the ultimate consumers protects the immobile resellers.
Cf. Ball Memorial Hosp., Inc. v. Mutual Hosp. Ins., Inc.,
Once the relevant market is defined to include a geographic region larger than San Juan
(ie.,
the Caribbean and Southeastern United States), Coastal has not satisfied its burden of showing that CAPECO had a dominant market share. While Coastal might, at least in theory, have shown that all refineries throughout the Caribbean and the Southeastern United States behaved like a cartel and priced their residual oil to capture the transportation and other costs of getting oil from sources outside the local ports, it has not done so here and it has failed to produce evidence sufficient for a reasonable jury to infer that such was the case. In short, Coastal has not shown that CAPECO had monopoly power over the relevant market.
Cf. Zoslaw v. MCA Distrib. Corp.,
C. Puerto Rico Law Tort
CAPECO also challenges the judgment on Coastal’s claim under 31 L.P.R.A. 5141 (“Article 1802”).
13
CAPECO claims that Coastal was required to allege and prove the elements of a recognized tort, and failed to do so. According to CAPECO, because the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has recently declined to rule that violation of an antitrust statute will also necessarily give rise to a violation of Article 1802, the violation of an antitrust statute does not give rise to a
per se
violation of Article 1802.
See Pressure Vessels of Puerto Rico,
CAPECO’s arguments may well have merit. However, we need express no opinion regarding CAPECO’s arguments as CAPECO waived them by failing to object to the jury instructions regarding the Article 1802 claim.
See Linn v. Andover Newton Theological School, Inc.,
CAPECO also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the Article 1802 findings. However, CAPECO has waived review here of this argument too by failing to move at any time for a judgment as a matter of law on this ground under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a),
see Wells Real Estate, Inc. v. Greater Lowell Board of Realtors,
As a result of CAPECO’s failure to preserve its arguments for review on appeal, we
D. Sufficient Evidence on Damages
CAPECO also argues that Coastal’s evidence on damages was inadequate as a matter of law, and therefore, the jury’s verdict on damages must be reversed. In particular, CAPECO argues that, as a new market entrant, Coastal was required to use the “yardstick” method of estimating damages.
With respect to the issue of how accurately damages must be measured, “there is a clear distinction between the [relatively high] measure of proof necessary to establish that [a plaintiff] has sustained some damage and the [relatively low] measure of proof necessary to enable the jury to fix the amount.”
Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co.,
Citing
Home Placement Service v. The Providence Journal Co.,
We conclude that whether a yardstick record must be used ultimately requires an appraisal of the reliability of a firm’s track record, and the length of that track record is one factor to consider. The plaintiff in Home Placement Service had operated as planned only weeks before the alleged violations began. Home Placement Service can best be read as demonstrating both the type of situation in which a yardstick method is preferable, and the factors that should go into a court’s evaluation of the comparability of the yardstick firm or firms with the plaintiff. 15
Ultimately, the proper method should be determined by the district court in accord with the facts of the situation. In this case, the district court will have exactly that opportunity, since we must vacate the district court’s damages award and remand for further proceedings. The district court charged the jury with an instruction to find an amount for “antitrust damages,” comprising awards for both price discrimination and monopolization claims.
16
Because we reverse the monopolization verdict, if left to stand, the jury’s antitrust damages award would likely constitute an excessive recovery. In coming to its conclusion, the jury may well have weighed harms resulting from conduct that was pleaded with respect to the monopolization offense
(e.g.
refusal to deal with a customer, lying, etc.) but would have been
II. Arguments for a New Trial
In addition to its arguments for reversal of the district court’s findings, CAPECO makes several arguments for reversal of the district court’s denial of its motion for a new trial.
“The authority to grant a new trial ... is confided almost entirely to the exercise of discretion on the part of the trial court.”
Allied Chem. Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc.,
A. Duplicative Judgment
In support of its request for a new trial, CAPECO argues that the damages awards constituted an impermissible' double recovery. CAPECO contends that both Coastal’s antitrust and tort claims were grounded in the same set of acts. Because we vacate and remand the antitrust damages for further findings on price discrimination damages, we construe CAPECO’s argument that price discrimination and tort damages would constitute duplicative damage recoveries,
see Borden v. Paul Revere Life Ins. Co.,
We reject this argument for three reasons. First, CAPECO failed to object to the form or content of the special interrogatories to which the jury answered. Second, CAPECO may well have waived its right to raise this issue here, since it failed to raise the issue in a timely manner with the trial court. Previously, we have held that a defendant may not argue verdict inconsistency if he or she failed to object “after the verdict was read and before the jury was discharged.”
See McIsaac v. Didriksen Fishing Corp.,
Finally, “[a] special verdict will be upheld if there is a view of the case which makes the jury’s answers consistent.”
McIsaac,
B. CAPECO’s Experts
Additionally, CAPECO argues that the district court’s refusal to allow its two experts, Dr. Jorge Freyre (“Dr. Freyre”) and Dr. Elias Gutiérrez (“Dr. Gutiérrez”), to testify was based on a fundamental error of law and was an abuse of discretion that requires that we reverse the district court and order a new trial.
In order to evaluate CAPECO’s contentions, we must review the district court’s orders leading up to the exclusion of the relevant testimony. The district court’s June 22, 1993 Scheduling Order stated that “[t]he parties will announce the names and qualifications of their experts by October 1, 1993.” This date was modified subsequently to December 1, 1993. In compliance with this order, CAPECO named César Figueroa (“Figueroa”) and Rafael Martmez-Margarida (“Martmez-Margarida”). On March 1, 1994, pursuant to a motion by new counsel for Caribbean, the district court modified the previous order and issued a revised scheduling order stating “all experts are to be announced by March 30,” and also specifying that expert reports to be used “during each party’s case-in-chief’ were to be exchanged on June 3, 1994, and that expert rebuttal reports were to be exchanged on July 1, 1994. Upon CAPECO’s June 1 motion, the date for reports to be exchanged was extended by an “Omnibus Order” to ten days after service of that order, dated August 15, 1994. On August 29, 1994, Coastal delivered to CAPECO expert reports prepared by Dr. Sherwin and Dr. Zalacain, and CAPECO provided Coastal with an expert report prepared by Figueroa. These experts were deposed between September 9 and September 14, and thereafter CAPECO retained experts Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez ostensibly as rebuttal witnesses under Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2)(C). CAPECO informed Coastal on September 20, 1994, that it had retained Dr. Freyre as a rebuttal witness, and similarly informed Coastal of Dr. Gutiérrez on or about October 4, 1994. CAPECO informed the district court about Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez on October 5,1995.
The district court instructed CAPECO to produce Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez and to make them available for depositions. On October 5 and October 6, Coastal filed motions in limine to exclude Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez, respectively, on the theory that neither witness could properly be characterized as a “rebuttal” witness within the meaning of Rule 26(a)(2)(C), and thus both should have been disclosed previously. After oral argument, the district court granted Coastal’s motion and excluded the testimony of Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez. The district court, upon CAPECO’s admission that it planned to use Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez in its case-in-chief, noted that “you got a problem with my orders because you have not complied with my orders insofar as Freyre and Gutiérrez [are] concerned,” apparently referring to the previous scheduling order deadline for experts in the case-in-chief to be disclosed.
CAPECO argues (1) that because the Omnibus Order did not provide a deadline for the exchange of rebuttal expert reports, no scheduling order applied, and therefore the disclosure of Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez was controlled by Rule 26(a)(2)(C);
17
and (2) that the district court misconstrued Rule 26(a)(2)(C) to signify that a defendant cannot offer testimony to “contradict or rebut” under Rule 26(a)(2)(C). We need not consider whether the district court in fact misconstrued Rule 26(a)(2)(C), because, for three reasons, we find no abuse of discretion in its exclusion of these witnesses as rebuttal witnesses. First, at no time did
Additionally, we cannot agree that the district court’s March 1,1994, Scheduling Order was necessаrily superceded, given that that order scheduled trial for October 24, 1994, and in fact, trial began on that date. The proximity in time between CAPECO’s attempts to bring in Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez and actual trial easts doubt on any argument that CAPECO was somehow misled into thinking that previous Scheduling Orders did not apply. Finally, even assuming that CAPECO is correct that the Scheduling Order’s provisions regarding rebuttal witnesses had been superceded and thus Rule 26(a)(2)(B) applied, the district court might still have enforced its previous deadlines regarding experts in the case-in-ehief. For better or for worse, at oral argument on October 21, 1994 (three days before trial was to start), counsel for CAPECO identified Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez as witnesses in its case-in-ehief. 18
Given the circumstances, we cannot conclude that the exclusion of the testimony of Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez was an abuse of discretion warranting a new trial.
C. CAPECO’s Meeting Competition Defense
CAPECO also argues that the district court should have given jury instructions on the affirmative defense of meeting competition. Section 2(b) of Clayton Act, as amended by the Robinson-Patman Act, permits a defendant to rebut a
prima facie
case of violation by showing that its. lower price “was made in good faith to meet an equally low price of a competitor.” 15 U.S.C. § 13(b). The “meeting competition” defense can be raised only by a defendant who responds in good faith to the believed lower price of a competitor.
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
We need not consider CAPECO’s argument that it believed in good faith that it was responding to a competitive threat posed by Coastal in combination with its parent CFMI, because we conclude that even assuming that Coastal and CFMI were a single entity, they do not constitute a competitor in the same specific area as CAPECO,
see Falls City,
D. CAPECO’s Puerto Rico Law Tort Counterclaim
CAPECO contends that the district court erred in dismissing its counterclaim grounded in Article 1802, 31 L.P.R.A. § 5141. Aсcording to CAPECO, it was a compulsory counterclaim and was thus not barred by the one year statute of limitations, at least to the extent of defeating the main claim.
We reject CAPECO’s argument for two reasons. First, in opposition to Coastal’s motion for summary judgment on the counterclaim, it failed to inform the district court of the theory it now advances, that it is entitled to recoupment notwithstanding the statute of limitations. Additionally, the gist of CAPECO’s counterclaim argument was that the threat posed by Coastal and CFMI allegedly working in concert forced CAPECO to give Harbor and Caribbean discounts, costing CAPECO potential profits. Given that we uphold the district court’s finding that these discounts were illegal price discrimination, it appears at least doubtful under Puerto Rico law that CAPECO can collect for any lost profits thereby incurred.
See, e.g., Rubio-Sacarello v. Roig,
CONCLUSION
Coastal succeeded below on three claims: price discrimination, monopolization and tort. CAPECO’s failure to make the points below that it now argues on appeal hamstrung its attempt to obtain reversal of the price discrimination and tort claims. But the definition of relevant market Coastal espoused could not be reasonably adopted by the jury, since this definition was legally insufficient in neglecting to account for downstream constraints on the proposed monopoly, and in failing to draw on sufficient evidence regarding those constraints.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Notes
. CAPECO tried to argue below and again argues here, that the contracts it executed with Caribbean and Harbor were qualitatively different in their non-price terms and conditions from CAPE-CO's arrangement with Coastal, justifying the discounts. Coastal responds that it was never offered the terms and conditions that Caribbean and Harbor received. In light of the jury's verdict for Coastal on the price discrimination claim, from conflicting evidence such as this, we draw the (reasonable) conclusion in Coastal's favor.
. We address this distinct argument below.
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 51 states, in pertinent part, that
[n]o party shall assign as error the giving or the failure to give an instruction unless that party objects thereto before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter objected to and the grounds of the objection.
. While this court has admitted "occasional" exceptions to the "raise-or-waive" principle, see
National Assoc. of Social Workers v. Harwood,
. The relevant language is as follows:
It shall be unlawful for any person, either directly or indirectly, to discriminate in price between different purchasers of commodities of like grade and quality, where such commodities are sold for use, consumption, or resale in Puerto Rico, and where the effect of such discrimination may be substantially to lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce in Puerto Rico, 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.
10 L.P.R.A. 263 (1976). Furthermore, Puerto Rico law includes a counterpart for the section 4 of the Clayton Act's authorization of treble damages. See 10 L.P.R.A. 268 (1976).
.
See Caribe BMW, Inc.,
.
See Stelwagon Manufacturing Co. v. Tarmac Roofing Systems, Inc.,
. The Robinson-Patman Act "attaches to competitive relations between a given seller and his several customers. It concerns discrimination between customers of the same seller. It has nothing to do with ... requir[ing] the maintenance of any relationship in prices charged by a competing seller.” H.R.Rep. No. 2287, 74th Cong., 2d Sess. § 8 (1936).
. While concerns about overenforcement harming overall consumer welfare may be valid, the Supreme Court retains the option of speaking further on this issue. See generally Paul Larule, Robinson-Patman Act in the Twenty-First Century: Will the Morton Salt Rule Be Retired? 48 S.M.U.L.Rev. 1917, 1927 (1995) (concluding that "[w]hen an appropriate case comes before it, the [Supreme] Court may well decide to make the final cut”); Hovenkamp § 14.6a (arguing that, after Brooke Group, “a reinterpretation of Robinson-Patman so as to permit secondary-line injury only when competition itself is threatened is long overdue”).
. There is conflicting authority for the proposition that a jury may infer actual injury from circumstantial evidence.
See Continental Ore Co.
v.
Union Carbide Corp.,
. The plaintiff must also define the relevant product market. H.J., Inc. v. Int'l Tel. & Tel. Corp., 867 F.2d 1531, 1537 (8th Cir.1989). The parties agree that the relevant product market is residual fuel oil sold by all refineries for use as bunker fuel for ocean-going vessels.
. The jury answered "yes" to the special interrogatory asking "Did Coastal establish that there is a relevant market comprising of the sale of residual fuel oil or diesel to bunker fuel resellers in the port of San Juan and that CAPECO has monopoly power in the relevant market?”
. Article 1802 states, in pertinent part, that:
[a] person who hy an act or omission causes damage to another through fault or negligence shall be obliged to repair the damage so done.
Id.
. In 1991, Rule 50 was amended, and the term "judgment as a matter of law” was adopted "to refer to preverdict” (directed verdict) and "post-verdict” (judgment notwithstanding the verdict) “motions with a terminology that does not conceal the common identity of two motions made at different times in the proceeding.” See Fed.R.Civ.P. 50 advisory committee's note.
. We note in passing that the plaintiff-appellant in
Home Placement Service
was challenging the district court's award of nominal damages and instead sought damages based on a yardstick analysis; the appeals court upheld the nominal damages finding because the evidence was "not 'sufficient to get the Court beyond the guessing stage.’"
Id.
at 1209 (quoting
William Goldman Theatres, Inc. v. Loew’s, Inc.,
. We understand the difficult choice that the district court faced. As a practical matter, it would be difficult, if not impossible, for a juror to segregate antitrust damages due to a monopolization offense but not due to illegal price discrimination from antitrust damages due only to price discrimination, where as here, the facts and conduct involved in both allegations greatly overlap.
. Rule 26’s schedule concerning the duty to disclose information concerning expert witnesses and their opinions may be altered by the court. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(a)(2)(C) (setting forth schedule of disclosure of expert testimony "[i]n the absence of other directions from the court or stipulation by the parties”).
. At one point in the oral argument over Coastal's motion in limine to exclude Dr. Freyre and Dr. Gutiérrez, the court asked “And when are you going to bring them?” To this question, counsel for CAPECO directly responded, "We are going to use [them] in our case [in] chief.”
