MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs, General Dynamics Corporation, et al. (hereinafter collectively referred to as “General Dynamics”), brought this antitrust action, alleging that defendants, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, et al. (hereinafter collectively referred to as “AT & T”), attempted to and did monopolize the telephone terminal equipment market from approximately 1970 through 1978. This matter is now before the court on General Dynamics’ motion to collaterally estop AT & T from relitigating certain issues decided adversely to AT & T in
Litton Systems, Inc. v. AT & T,
I. Facts
General Dynamics acquired StrombergCarlson Corp., a manufacturer and distributor of telecommunications equipment, in 1955. Stromberg-Carlson historically sold the bulk of its equipment to independent (non-Bell) telephone companies, which, in turn, leased the equipment to their customers. Occasionally, Stromberg-Carlson sold its equipment to Bell companies, which also leased the equipment to their customers. Recently, Stromberg-Carlson began distributing its equipment directly to subscribers of both independent and Bell telephone companies.
In Counts I and II of its complaint, General Dynamics claims that AT & T unlawfully monopolized the “customer premises equipment distribution submarket”
1
by interfering with the connection of non-Bell customer premises equipment to the telephone network. More specifically, General Dynamics contends that AT & T interfered
A. Regulatory History
The allegations set forth in Counts I and II of General Dynamics’ complaint, as well as the claims in
Litton
and in several other actions against AT & T, arise out of changes in federal telecommunications policy during the 1950s and 1960s. The court in
Jack Faucett Associates v. AT & T, 744
F.2d 118 (D.C.Cir.1984),
cert. denied,
Prior to 1956, AT & T, through a tariff filed with the [Federal Communications Commission (“FCC” or “Commission”)], prohibited the attachment of all foreign devices to its telephone network. AT & T justified this prohibition as necessary to ensure the safe and effective operation of the national telephone network. Using the same rationale of operational concerns, the FCC, in 1955, prohibited the use of a sound shield that attached to a telephone’s mouthpiece. Hush-A-Phone Corp.,20 F.C.C. 391 (1955). Indicating that actual harm' to the network was to be the guiding principle, this court voided that FCC decision, finding the Hush-A-Phone ruling to be neither just nor reasonable. Hush-A-Phone Corp. v. United States,238 F.2d 266 (D.C.Cir.1956). This case represented the initial erosion of AT & T’s absolute bar against foreign attachments. In Use of the Carterphone Device in Message Toll Telephone Service,13 F.C.C.2d 420 , reconsideration denied,14 F.C.C.2d 571 (1968), the FCC applied the Hush-A-Phone rationale and declared unlawful the existing foreign attachment prohibition and ordered AT & T to file new tariffs.
In response to Carterphone, AT & T filed the so-called interface tariffs that are a focus of this litigation. In broad terms, the tariffs permitted the attachment of foreign devices to the telephone network so long as any electrical connections were through a PCA or other interface device provided by AT & T or its subsidiaries. The FCC permitted the tariffs to become effective, but did so without “giving any specific approval to the revised tariffs.” AT & T “Foreign Attachment” Tariff Revisions,15 F.C.C.2d 605 , 610 (1968). For several years thereafter, the necessity of requiring the interface device was studied. In 1969, for example, the FCC convened a panel of the National Academy of Sciences to study the problem. And in May 1971, the FCC formed a “PBX Advisory Committee” to study the feasibility of connections to the network without the interface device. State regulatory commissions also investigated AT & T’s interface tariffs. See, e.g., New York Telephone Co., 79 P.U.R.3d 410 , 417 (N.Y.Pub.Serv.Comm’n 1969); Glusing v. C & P Telephone Co., 1974 Md. P.S.C. 377 (Md.Pub.Serv.Comm’n).
In 1972, the FCC instituted rulemaking proceedings to address the interconnection issues. During the proceedings the PBX Committee submitted a report that included a model certification program. Under a certification program, terminal equipment that met certain standards could connect to the AT & T network without any interface device. AT & T, whether motivated by a genuine desire to protect its network or by a desire to protect its alleged monopoly, opposed the certification standard by filing comments with the Commission and, allegedly, by taking other steps in opposition. Despite this opposition, the FCC, in late 1975, adopted regulations establishing certification standards. Proposals for New or Revised Classes of Interstate and Foreign Message Toll Telephone Service (MTS) and Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS),56 F.C.C.2d 593 , 599-613 (1975). Subsequently, the FCC applied its certification regulations to customer-provided terminal equipment. 58 F.C. C.2d 736 (1976). The Commission’s order was affirmed on appeal. North Carolina Utilities Commission v. FCC,552 F.2d 1036 (4th Cir.), cert. denied,434 U.S. 874 ,98 S.Ct. 222 ,54 L.Ed.2d 154 (1977).
Faucett,
B. Prior Cases
General Dynamics seeks to estop AT & T on the basis of the
Litton
jury verdict, and it is to this case that the court now turns. However, also relevant to this court’s determination is the government case against AT & T,
United States v. AT & T,
1. The Litton Decision
The Faucett court set forth Litton’s history and holding:
In June 1976, Litton Systems and some of its subsidiaries (collectively referred to as Litton) brought an antitrust action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against AT & T, Western Electric Company, Bell Telephone Laboratories, and several Bell operating companies. Litton, suing as both competitor and customer, alleged that AT & T had monopolized and attempted to monopolize the telephone terminal equipment market by requiring the use of the interface device and by opposing the certification program that would have abolished that requirement.
The Litton litigation was lengthy and complex. Pretrial proceedings consumed over four years. Trial began in 1980, ran for more than five months and generated 18,000 pages of testimony and 945 exhibits. The jury ultimately found for Litton, concluding that, inter alia, AT & T had filed the interface tariff in bad faith, had intentionally delayed in providing and installing the interface devices, and had opposed certification in bad faith____ 4 The jury awarded damages in the sum of $92,258,243, before trebling.
On appeal the Second Circuit affirmed. 700 F.2d 785 (2d Cir.1983).... Significantly, the court, two judges concurring, held that AT & T’s actions were not within the ambit of the Noerr-Pennington doctrine. Id. at 806-09. This conclusion, the court indicated, was required because AT & T was “ ‘engaged in private commercial activity, no element of which involved seeking to procure the passage or enforcement of laws.’ The decision to impose and maintain the interface tariff was made in the AT & T boardroom, not at the FCC____” Id. at 807. The court thus concluded that AT & T’s opposition to certification “embraced much more than merely advocating a position before the FCC.” Id. at 809. Alternatively, the court, all three judges concurring, held that if NoerrPennington were applicable, liability attached since AT & T’s actions were within the sham exception.
[The Second Circuit also concluded] that the trial court erred in excluding a 1969 New York State Public Service Commission decision that approved the interface requirement as a reasonable means of protecting the AT & T network from harm____ The court, however, held that in light of the “complicated and extensive trial” the error was harmless. Id. [at 819.]
Faucett,
2. The Government Case
In 1979, the United States filed an antitrust action against AT & T, et al., alleging that AT & T, through a variety of actions including the PCA requirement, had violated the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.
United States v. AT &T,
After the Government presented its case in chief, AT & T moved to dismiss the suit under Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b), contending that the Government presented insufficient evidence to support a verdict. Judge Greene largely denied AT & T’s motion in an avowedly “ ‘tentative and inconclusive ruling on the quantum of plaintiff’s proof.’ ”
Id.
at 1343
(quoting Armour Research Foundation v. Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Co.,
As stated above, five other courts have already considered whether, and to what extent, the
Litton
jury verdict should estop AT & T from relitigating certain issues. In
Faucett,
The plaintiff in
Glictronix,
The court in
Selectron,
The courts in
Phonetele, Inc. v. AT & T,
General Dynamics requests the court to estop AT & T from litigating the following issues:
1. Whether the relevant product market is the sale and lease of customer premises equipment (also known as telephone terminal equipment) consisting of PBX systems and key telephone systems.
2. Whether AT & T possessed monopoly power in the relevant market during the period in question in Litton, i.e., November 20, 1970 to July 1, 1978.
3. Whether AT & T had specific intent to obtain monopoly power in the relevant market during that period.
4. Whether there was a dangerous probability that AT & T would obtain monopoly power in the relevant market.
5. Whether AT & T attempted to and did willfully obtain and maintain its monopoly power in the relevant market by the following anticompetitive conduct:
(a) filing its tariff requiring an interface device in bad faith;
(b) opposing certification of customer premises equipment in bad faith;
(c) intentionally delaying the provision and installation of interface devices;
(d) refusing in bad faith to sell at all or on a reasonable basis inside wiring which AT & T had installed on a customer’s premises; and
(e) delaying in bad faith cutovers from customer premises equipment distributed by AT & T to customer premises equipment distributed by General Dynamics.
6. Whether AT & T’s alleged anticompetitive conduct proximately caused injury and damage to General Dynamics in its capacity as a customer forced to pay AT & T’s interface device charges.
7. Whether the interface device was not necessary to protect AT & T’s telephone network from harm.
8. Whether the Noerr-Pennington doctrine is not a defense to AT & T’s claims.
See General Dynamics’ Motion For Determination of Collateral Estoppel.
“Under the doctrine of collateral estoppel, ‘once an issue is actually and necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, the determination is conclusive in subsequent suits, based on a different cause of action, involving a party to the prior litigation.’ ”
Garza v. Henderson,
In addition, the court should consider whether application of collateral estoppel would be substantially unfair to the party to be estopped.
Ray v. Indiana & Michigan Electric Co.,
A. Identity Of Issues
AT & T contends that the issues decided in Litton are not identical to those in the present case. According to AT & T, the issues are not identical because the relevant product market in this case differs from that in Litton, and General Dynamics’ competitive position in the marketplace differs from that of Litton.
First, the court finds that the relevant product market in
Litton
does not differ from that in this case. According to AT & T, the
Litton
market did not include standard telephone instruments, as does the market in this case. However, all PBX and key systems include standard telephone instruments, according to AT & T’s own definition of the systems, set forth in its Petition for Certiorari in Litton.
8
AT
&
T also contends that all PBX and key systems are not the same; therefore,
Litton
does not apply to cases involving systems not specifically at issue in
Litton.
The
Glictronix
court considered and rejected this contention, concluding that
Litton
clearly addressed the entire product market, and that a new determination need not be made regarding the specific PBX and key systems at issue in each case.
Glictronix,
However, AT & T correctly states that General Dynamics and Litton did not share the same competitive position in the telephone terminal equipment market. Litton manufactured and sold to AT & T’s customers PBX and key systems to be used with AT & T’s phone system. The thrust of Litton’s claim at trial, therefore, was
B. Actual Litigation Of Issues In The Prior Case
AT & T asserts that the court should not estop it from litigating the issue of what constitutes the relevant product market. According to AT & T, the
IAtton
parties did not actually litigate this issue; rather, they stipulated to the relevant product market.
9
It is clear that, “when a particular fact is established not by judicial resolution but by stipulation of the parties, that fact has not been 'actually litigated’ and thus is not a proper candidate for issue preclusion.” Oth
erson v. Department of Justice, Immigration and Naturalization Service,
However, “[w]hen a stipulation merely helps to shape the record a factfinder will use to determine the truth of a fact, rather than to establish the truth of the fact itself, that fact may be preclusively established in a later trial if the other requirements for issue preclusion are met.”
Otherson,
The stipulation in
Litton
as to the relevant product market resolved, for that suit, the issue of what constitutes the relevant product market; the stipulation did not merely help shape the record the jury used to determine the issues. Also, the parties did not couch the stipulation in language manifesting an affirmative intention to be bound by the stipulation in future cases. Therefore, this court will not estop AT & T from litigating the relevant product market issue in this suit.
Accord, Faucett,
AT & T also asserts that the court should not estop it from litigating the issues of whether it intentionally delayed the provision and installation of interface devices
This court finds that the
Litton
evidence and findings extended not only to Litton, but to other AT & T competitors and customers.
Litton,
Unlike AT & T’s filing of the PCA tariff and opposing certification, AT & T’s refusal to sell inside wiring and intentional delay in providing essential goods and services to Litton and other competitors may not have affected the Selectron plaintiffs. Because of the episodic nature of these issues the court refuses to grant them collateral estoppel effect. See Starker v. United States,602 F.2d 1341 , 1348-50 (9th Cir.1979).
Selectron,
C. Determination Of Issues Necessary To The Judgment
AT & T contends that the Litton jury’s decision that AT & T filed the interface tariff in bad faith was not necessary to the Litton judgment; therefore, the court should not preclude AT & T from now litigating this issue. As stated earlier, the Litton jury reached an initial verdict, returned to deliberations, and then found that AT & T filed the tariff in bad faith, without changing the amount of damages initially assessed. See supra n. 4. AT & T contends that, because this finding came after the jury determined damages, the jury “plainly” did not rely on this finding and it was therefore not essential to the judgment. AT & T also asserts that this finding was “undoubtedly reached as a compromise among the jurors,” and it is therefore not binding in this case. See AT & T’s Memorandum in Opposition at 66.
AT & T argued on appeal in
Litton
that the “belated” jury findings were coerced and should therefore be set aside.
Litton,
It is clear that the determination of an issue must be necessary to the judgment in order to preclude litigation of the issue in subsequent suits.
Gilldorn Savings Association v. Commerce Savings Association,
The
Litton
jury’s finding that AT & T filed the interface tariff in bad faith was an independent, alternative ground for the
Litton
monopolization verdict. The jury clearly identified all the alternative grounds for its verdict in the special interrogatories. AT & T challenged, and the Second Circuit sustained, this particular finding on appeal. AT & T has presented no evidence that this finding was coerced or the result of a compromise. Therefore, the court finds that this finding was necessary to the
Litton
judgment.
Accord, Glictronix,
D. Fairness to AT & T
1. Inconsistent Decisions on AT & T’s Noerr-Pennington Defense
Application of collateral estoppel may be unfair where there are judgments inconsistent with the judgment which forms the basis for the collateral estoppel motion.
Parklane,
In Professor Currie’s familiar example, a railroad collision injures 50 passengers all of whom bring separate actions against the railroad. After the railroad wins the first 25 suits, a plaintiff wins in suit 26. Professor Currie argues that offensive use of collateral estoppel should not be applied so as to allow plaintiffs 27 through 50 automatically to recover.
Parklane,
The
Litton
jury found that AT & T filed its interface tariff with, and opposed certification standards before, the FCC in bad faith. The trial court instructed the jury on the
Noerr-Pennington
defense, but the jury obviously found the defense inapplicable, or found the case to fall within the sham exception. On appeal, AT & T challenged the trial court’s
Noerr-Pennington
instructions, contending that the instructions misstated the sham exception and erroneously applied a “preponderance” rather than a “clear and convincing” evidentiary standard.
Litton,
The Second Circuit held, after reviewing the jury instructions in their totality, that the instructions “accurately, if in general terms, tracked the Supreme Court's explication of the sham exception in
California Motor Transport [Co. v. Trucking Unlimited,
In the Government action, AT & T moved to dismiss after the conclusion of the Government’s case, pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.P. 41(b).
See supra
p. 6. Judge Greene largely denied the motion, noting that he was not required to grant AT & T’s motion to dismiss at that stage of the proceedings, even if under the law he could
The decision on the motion to dismiss is a “tentative and inconclusive ruling on the quantum of plaintiffs proof,” which does not preclude a court from making findings and conclusions at the close of the case that are inconsistent with its prior tentative ruling.
Id. (quoting Armour,
Judge Greene went on to discuss,
inter alia,
the application of the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine to various AT & T activities.
United States v. AT & T,
AT & T contends that Judge Greene’s decision is an inconsistent decision, the existence of which renders collateral estoppel on the issues of AT & T’s bad faith in filing the interface tariff and opposing certification unfair. General Dynamics contends, however, that Judge Greene’s decision does not possess the finality needed to constitute an inconsistent “judgment” or “decision.”
See Parklane,
In
Miller Brewing Co. v. Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co.,
This court therefore finds Judge Greene’s
Noerr-Pennington
decision sufficiently final under
Miller
to preclude estoppel on the application of the
Noerr-Pennington
defense.
14
Accord, Faucett,
2. Full and Fair Opportunity to Litigate: Exclusion of the New York Regulatory Decision
Courts have not clearly specified the source, or defined the content, of the requirement that the first litigation offer a full and fair opportunity to litigate.
Kremer v. Chemical Construction Corp.,
AT & T contends that it did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate
Litton
because the trial court excluded a 1969 New York State Public Service Commission decision which upheld AT & T’s interface
AT & T contends that it would have introduced other state regulatory decisions regarding the interface requirement, but it considered the court’s exclusion of the New York decision applicable to such decisions. Therefore, AT & T contends that the Litton court erroneously prevented it from introducing at trial several state regulatory decisions finding the interface requirement reasonable. 16 AT & T contends that this evidence would demonstrate that it reasonably believed that the interface requirement was in the public interest and might receive the FCC’s approval.
In
Faucett,
the court found that the excluded state regulatory decisions could influence the determination of AT & T’s alleged liability in a new trial.
Faucett,
This court finds persuasive, and adopts, the reasoning and holding in
Faucett. Accord, Glictronix,
AT & T contends that it would be unfair to preclude it from relitigating issues which the Litton jury determined because the Litton judgment was based on a false premise. According to AT & T, central to the Litton judgment was the premise that, after the Carter-phone decision, AT & T knew that it could not exclude customer-provided terminal equipment absent a showing of actual harm. AT & T contends that this allegedly false premise served as the basis for the Litton finding that AT & T acted in bad faith in filing the interface tariff and opposing certification.
The
Glictronix
court exhaustively addressed this contention,
Glictronix,
III. Conclusion
In sum, the court denies General Dynamics’ motion to collaterally estop AT & T adversely to AT & T in Litton, finding that (1) the issues before the Litton jury are not identical to those in the present action; (2) certain issues were not actually litigated in Litton; (3) Judge Greene’s decision regarding the Noerr-Pennington defense conflicts with the Litton verdict; and (4) AT & T did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate in Litton because of the exclusion of state regulatory decisions.
Notes
. General Dynamics defines this market as including the design, sale, leasing, installation, interconnection and maintenance of customer premises equipment, including the telephone instrument itself, key telephone systems, and private business exchange ("PBX”) systems.
See
Complaint ¶¶ 17(h), 18(b). Key telephone systems allow a single telephone to connect several other telephones through the use of buttons on the telephones.
Jack Faucett Associates v. AT & T,
. General Dynamics defines this market as including the development, manufacture and distribution of a broad range of equipment designed for use in conjunction with communications services, i.e., central office switching and transmission equipment and customer premises equipment. See Complaint ¶ 18(a).
. The issues General Dynamics seeks to estop AT & T from relitigating also arise in paragraph 46 of Count III, according to General Dynamics.
. When the
Litton
jury first returned its verdict finding AT & T guilty of monopolization, it had failed to reach unanimity on special interrogatories 16(a) (asking whether AT & T filed the interface tariff in bad faith), 16(i) (asking whether AT & T delayed in making cutovers in bad faith), and 7 (asking whether AT & T’s attempted monopolization was a proximate cause of injury to the plaintiffs). Special interrogatory 16 listed nine alleged practices of AT & T, and asked the jury to identify the practices on which it based its finding of predatory conduct. Although the jury had failed to reach unanimity on special interrogatories 16(a) and 16(i), it
After the initial verdict, although the court was of the opinion that the answer to special interrogatory 16(c) could support the damage award, the court instructed the jury to return to deliberations to try to answer interrogatories 7, 16(a) and 16(i). The jury, after deliberating approximately a half hour, returned and found against AT & T on all three issues. The jury did not change the amount of damages it had already calculated, however.
See Litton,
. The Phonetele plaintiff manufactured "Phone-master," a toll and message-unit restriction device used in conjunction with PBX and key systems. The Wrede plaintiffs manufactured an automatic dialing device.
In denying the plaintiffs request for collateral estoppel, the
Phonetele
court also found that the
. General Dynamics names as defendants in this action all of AT & T’s Bell Operating Companies (“BOCs”). Litton sued only seven of the BOCs. However, prior to January 1, 1984, the date of the divestiture of AT & T, the Bell system, including all of the BOCs, was "legally a single enterprise.”
United States v. Western Electric Co., Inc.,
. General Dynamics points out that AT & T’s Petition for Certiorari in
Litton
acknowledges that there are, or have been, at least seventeen different cases brought against AT & T dealing with the interface tariff.
See
General Dynamics’ Memorandum in Support of Motion For Determination of Collateral Estoppel at 12 and Tab "2." This court accordingly finds that, although General Dynamics and the other affected manufacturers may have been able to technically effect joinder in
Litton,
such joinder could not have occurred with “ease."
See Starker v. United States,
. AT & T defined the systems as follows in its Petition for Certiorari, p. 2:
A PBX includes a switchboard and a number of extension telephones. The PBX can switch calls from one extension telephone to another as well as permit outside calls to be placed and received.
A key telephone system includes telephone sets with buttons or keys and certain common equipment. The keys give each telephone set access to more than one telephone line.
See
General Dynamics’ Reply Memorandum at 64. General Dynamics also points out that the plaintiff in
Selectron
was a General Dynamics’ distributor; therefore, that case involved exactly the same PBX and key systems involved in the present case. In
Selectron,
AT & T conceded, and the court found, that the
Selectron
product market was the same as that in
Litton. Selectron,
. The
Litton
parties stipulated that the relevant product market is the sale and lease of telephone terminal equipment consisting of PBX and key telephone systems.
See Litton
trial transcript at 18020.
. AT & T also contends that the
Litton
decision conflicts on the
Noerr-Pennington
issue with
Southern Pacific Communications Co. v. AT & T,
AT & T also contends that certain "decisions" of the FCC and State regulatory agencies, and a report by the National Academy of Sciences (“NAS”), conflict with the
Litton
finding that AT & T filed the interface tariff in bad faith. Agency findings may be given preclusive effect where the agency acts in a judicial capacity and the party against whom estoppel will be applied had a full and fair opportunity to present its case to the agency.
EZ Loader Boat Trailers, Inc.
v.
Cox Trailers, Inc.,
. Two judges in the
Litton
appeal found the
Noerr-Pennington
defense inapplicable to AT & T’s tariff filing and opposition to certification.
Litton,
All three Litton appellate judges found that AT & T’s actions fell within the sham exception. Id. at 809-12. According to the court, AT & T’s consistent and "baseless” claim that the PCA requirement was necessary to protect the telephone network amounted to an abuse of the administrative process and effectively barred other terminal equipment competitors from access to the telephone network system. Id.
. Specifically as to the sham exception, the court found:
The sham exception ... must be narrowly construed so as not to chill the rights of individuals and corporations to access to courts and to legislative and regulatory bodies. This principle would be hindered by a ruling which exposed an entity to antitrust liability on the basis that an official body found its contentions to be unsupported by the facts or otherwise without merit. To be a sham, the representation must go beyond the normal and legitimate exercises of the right to petition; it must amount to a subversion of the integrity of the process. And, absent special circumstances, this standard is not breached unless there is evidence of a series of misleading statements, of representations having the effect of actually barring access to an official body, or of an intent to mislead the body concerning central facts. The Court finds that the Bell statements at issue here are not in any of these categories.
United States v. AT & T,
.
Miller
and its progeny did not concern the finality of alleged inconsistent judgments; rather, they dealt with the finality of decisions upon which parties sought collateral estoppel. The
Faucett
court found that the "finality required for an inconsistent determination precluding estoppel and that required in order to utilize a case for offensive estoppel are not the same, and that it is enough if the inconsistent judgment "undermines the court’s confidence in the underlying decision.”
Faucett,
. Additionally, this court notes that collateral estoppel may apply to questions of law as well as to questions of fact.
Speaker Sortation Systems v. United States Postal Service,
. The court specifically held:
We view this evidence as arguably probative of AT & T’s position, and find it difficult to justify the exclusion of this decision in light of the admission of the various FCC rulings. Although there is a considerable difference in cost between the two interface devices, this goes more to the weight to be accorded the evidence than its admissibility; any confusion or prejudice probably could have been avoided by appropriate instructions. But we are also mindful of the fact that this was a complicated and extensive trial, involving four and one-half years of pretrial proceedings, five months of trial, more than 18,000 pages of testimony and 945 exhibits. If a jury trial of this size and complexity is to be had at all, the trial court must have the discretion to limit the evidence at some point. We cannot find that this exclusion amounted to prejudicial error.
Litton,
. The
Faucett
and
Glictronix
courts accepted AT & T’s contention that it would have introduced more state regulatory decisions, but the
Litton
trial, court’s ruling would have applied to, and excluded, such decisions.
Faucett,
. AT & T also contends that it is now prepared to introduce a significant amount of evidence which goes to the heart of the allegations against it in this case.
See Glictronix,
The
Glictronix
court found that at least a portion of AT & T’s new evidence, consisting of the testimony of Walter Hinchman, ex-Chief of the FCC’s Common Carrier Bureau, in
Southern Pacific,
