OPINION
This lawsuit, brought by Novell, Inc. against Microsoft, Corp., is the last action pending in MDL 1332, In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litigation. Earlier in the litigation, on an interlocutory appeal, the Fourth Circuit affirmed a ruling I had made dismissing Counts II through V of Novell’s complaint on limitations grounds. These Counts asserted antitrust claims for harm caused to Novell’s software applications as a result of Microsoft’s monopolization and attempted monopolization of the word processing and spreadsheet markets. The Fourth Circuit held (as had I) that these claims were not tolled during the pendency of the action brought by the United States against Microsoft because, unlike the government case, they were based upon conduct committed by Microsoft in the software applications, not the operating system, market.
Two claims, asserted respectively in Counts I and VI, remain pending: (1) Microsoft violated § 2 of the Sherman Act by taking anticompetitive actions against, and causing damage to, software applications owned by Novell for the purpose of obtaining and maintaining its monopoly in the operating system market; and (2) Microsoft violated § 1 of the Sherman Act by entering into agreements with third parties “not to license or distribute Novell’s office productivity applications or to do so only on terms that materially disadvantaged those products.”
I.
A motion for summary judgment should be granted when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). The materiality of facts is determined by the underlying substantive law.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II.
Under an Asset Purchase Agreement (“APA”) dated July 23, 1996, Novell assigned to Caldera claims “held by Novell at the Closing Date and associated directly or indirectly with any of the DOS Products ...” 1 The term “DOS Products” was defined in the APA to include Novell’s PC operating systems DR DOS and Novell DOS, among other products. Novell had previously sold to Corel Corporation its Business Applications Division, which encompassed various software applications, including WordPerfect (its word processing program), Quattro Pro (its spreadsheet program), and PerfectOffice (a combination of WordPerfect and Quattro Pro). In its agreement with Corel, Novell expressly retained “the antitrust claims for harm that Microsoft caused” to those products.
In my earlier opinion dismissing Counts II through V, I ruled that Novell did not assign to Caldera the claims asserted in Counts I and VI because those claims focused upon harm suffered by Novell’s software applications, not upon harm suffered
Upon further reflection I have decided that my earlier ruling was wrong. Although the claims asserted by Novell in Counts I and VI are for damage caused to it software applications, the reason Microsoft allegedly engaged in the conduct causing the damage was to obtain and maintain its monopoly in the operating system market — the market in which the DOS Products competed. Novell’s theory as to those claims is that Microsoft intentionally took actions against Novell’s applications because (1) if those applications had retained their popularity, consumers might insist upon purchasing operating systems with which the applications were compatible, thereby threatening Windows 95’s market power; and (2) “PerfectOffice,” developed by Novell, constituted (or nearly constituted) “middleware,” which could have been effectively used with any operating system and that therefore would have “commoditized” Windows 95 and undermined the monopoly Microsoft enjoyed in the operating system market.
In short, Counts I and VI assert claims for damage inflicted upon Novell’s software applications through the prism of the operating system market. Hybrid in nature, the claims were ingeniously designed to survive Microsoft’s anticipated limitations defense by permitting Novell to argue that the pendency of the government case against Microsoft — which was based upon Microsoft’s antitrust violations in the operating system market — tolled limitations. 2 Successful though that argument has been in defeating Microsoft’s limitations defense, it is fatal to Novell’s position on the claims ownership issue. By associating claims for harm to applications with the operating system market in which the DOS products competed, the argument establishes that the claims were transferred by Novell to Caldera under the APA.
Reduced to its essence, Novell’s primary contention is that all that the APA meant to assign was claims for
harm
inflicted upon the DOS products.
3
As previ
Furthermore, even if I were to consider the extrinsic evidence proffered by Novell, I would not find that it supports Novell’s contention about the meaning of the assignment language in the APA because that evidence is itself ambiguous and inconclusive.
7
Novell points to the testimo
In short, if Novell had intended, as it now argues, to assign to Caldera only claims for harm inflicted upon the DOS Products and Related Technology, it should have so stated in the APA. It did not do so, and the language it in fact employed encompasses the claims that it now seeks to assert in this action because these claims are “associated directly or indirectly with ... the DOS Products.” 9
I now turn to the merits of the antitrust claims for monopolization in violation of § 2 (Count I) and unreasonable restraint of trade in violation of § 1 (Count VI). As stated at the outset of this opinion, I find that, had Novell not assigned them to Caldera, Count I would have survived Microsoft’s Motion for Summary Judgment and Count VI would not have.
A.
From the early 1980s through the mid 1990s, Microsoft worked with Novell, and other independent software vendors (“ISVs”), to ensure that Novell’s software applications could function properly on Microsoft’s personal computer (“PC”) operating systems. (See, e.g., Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 1 (Expert Report of Ronald S. Alepín) at 33.) Such cooperation was in the interest of both parties: Microsoft’s PC operating systems were able to support Novell’s popular applications and Novell’s applications were able to better function on the popular Microsoft PC operating systems.
In June of 1994, Novell acquired Word-Perfect, Quattro Pro, and GroupWise (an e-mail application). By this time, Microsoft had acquired monopoly power in the PC operating system market, (see id. at 4 n. 3.), and had begun developing a new operating system, Windows 95. However, particularly after Novell’s acquisition of these three applications, Microsoft began to view Novell as a threat to its monopoly in the PC operating system market. (See Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 1 at 9-11 (Alepín Expert Report).) Specifically, the capabilities, popularity, number, and diversity of Novell’s software applications “could make Microsoft’s operating system irrelevant if [Novell’s applications] achieved ubiquity”:
Future versions of WordPerfect combined with Novell’s networking technologies ... would make PerfectOffice a compelling proposition for users in the next generation of computing.... [A] new operating system vendor would need only to recruit PerfectOffice to its platform to develop a credible threat to Microsoft’s PC operating systems business.
(Id., Exh. 1 at 77 (Alepín Expert Report).) Microsoft executives were well aware of and concerned by this threat. (See, e.g., id., Exh. 54 (Microsoft executive explaining to investor Warren Buffet that “[i]f we own the key ‘franchises’ built on top of the operating system, we dramatically widen the ‘moat’ that protects the operating system”)'.)
While Windows 95 was being developed, Novell’s cooperative relationship with Microsoft began to fracture. First, Novell complains of Microsoft’s conduct regarding Windows 95 “namespace extensions.” In 1993 and 1994, prior to the Windows 95 launch, Microsoft “evangelized” among ISVs the use of APIs called “namespace extensions.”
10
(Id.,
Exh. 1 at 12 (Alepín Expert Report).) These namespace extensions allowed “ISVs to integrate custom namespace objects into the Windows 95 shell namespace” and “provide rich, custom views of data.” In the fall of 1993, Microsoft informed WordPerfect that it
Second, Novell alleges that as it was preparing WordPerfect’s printing function for Windows 95, Microsoft misled it about what APIs and printing functionality Windows 95 would possess. {Id., Exh. 1 at 160-63 (Alepín Expert Report).) “Microsoft’s failure to provide this functionality ... cost Novell substantial resources and degraded its final products’ functionality.” {Id., Exh. 1 at 163 (Alepín Expert Report).)
Third, Novell alleges Microsoft improperly denied it a logo license for Windows 95. In September of 1994, Microsoft launched its “Designed for Windows 95” logo program, which allowed an ISV-to display the Windows 95 logo if the ISV’s product met various technical requirements. {Id., Exh. 1 at 144 (Alepín Expert Report).) These requirements included the ability to function properly on Windows NT 3.5, Microsoft’s operating system for workstations, a market in which Microsoft had only limited success competing. {Id., Exh. 1 at 148-49 (Alepín Expert Report).) However, Microsoft also allowed an exemption from the Windows NT-compatibility requirement for products that experienced “incompatibilities ... attributable to functionality that is significantly different in architecture between Windows 95 and Windows NT.” {Id., Exh. 1 at 151 (Alepín Expert Report) (internal quotations and citations omitted).) Despite “architectural differences” in fact being the “root cause” of Novell’s inability to achieve Windows NT compatibility, Novell was denied an exemption and denied a Windows 95 logo license. {Id., Exh. 1 at 152-54 (Alepín Expert Report).)
Fourth, Novell alleges Microsoft injured GroupWise by “withholding and manipulating MAPI,” an API designed to improve the functionality of e-mail applications. 11 Specifically, Novell alleges that Microsoft evangelized MAPI among ISVs, and then failed to document the MAPI extensions and failed to properly integrate MAPI with Windows 95. {See id., Exh. 1 at 120-23, 127-34 (Alepín Expert Report).) These actions allegedly impeded non-Microsoft email applications, such as Group-Wise, from achieving optimal functionality. {See id., Exh. 1 at 131-34 (Alepín Expert Report).)
Fifth and finally, Novell asserts that Microsoft pressured large application purchasers — such as original equipment man
(1) In 1995, under “Project Avalanche” agreements, Microsoft sought to “[ijncrease and sustain North American share for Word and Excel by >10% points” and “[sjustain Office share at >80% through Office 95 launch.” (Id., Exh. 126 at 1; cf. id., Exh. 3 at 107-08 (Noll Expert Decl.).) These agreements (i) provided a 2 to 5 percent rebate to distributors and resellers who increased their “blended share” of Microsoft Word and Excel; (ii) provided a rebate (under 5 percent) to distributors and resellers who increased their overall sales of certain Microsoft software applications; (iii) required distributors and resellers to provide Microsoft with weekly reports of their sales of WordPerfect, Quattro Pro, and other competing products; and (iv) required distributors and resellers to abide by various other requirements for marketing and selling certain Microsoft software applications. (See id., Exh. 3 at 107-08 (Noll Expert Deck); id., Exh. 123 at B1-B7; id., Exh. 126 at 1, 12, 20-27.) These contracts were designed to reward distributors and resellers who increased their share of Microsoft software applications. (See id., Exh. 126 at 26; id., Exh. 128.)
(2) Microsoft executed “per system” licenses with OEMs. Under per system licenses, an OEM paid “a negotiated royalty multiplied by a number equal to the larger of (a) the number of full or partial copies of the particular Microsoft product distributed by the OEM during the term of the license or (b) the number of Customer Systems shipped by the OEM during the term of the license.” (Id., Exh. 136.) “Costumer Systems” were defined by characteristics such as microprocessor and model name. (Id., Exh. 136.) Novell contends that these agreements “effectively preclude[ed]” the OEMs that agreed to them from licensing Novell’s products because “[ojnce under a per system license, an OEM had to develop and market a distinct product line if it wanted to pre-install Novell’s applications.” (Id. at 41.)
(3) “Microsoft forced OEMs to sign contracts with minimum purchase commitments that substantially exceeded a realistic expectation by the OEM.” (Id., Exh. 3 at 100 (Noll Expert Deck).) If an OEM fell short of selling enough Microsoft applications to meet its minimum commitment, Microsoft had the right to retain what was the equivalent of a deposit amounting to the unpaid balance on the OEM’s commitment. (See id., Exh. 3 at 100 (Noll Expert Deck).) Microsoft often then gave the OEM the choice of forfeiting this deposit or using it as a credit on another contract with Microsoft, “thereby giving the OEM a financial incentive to renew its contract with Microsoft” at the expense of Novell’s products. (See id., Exh. 3 at 100 (Noll Expert Deck).)
In March of 1996, Novell sold WordPerfect and Quattro Pro, but retained ownership of GroupWise.
Novell has raised an issue of triable fact as to whether Microsoft’s Novell-injuring conduct was anticompetitive and whether that conduct caused anticompetitive harm in the PC operating system market. I therefore find that, if Novell had not assigned its claims via the APA, summary judgment on Count I would have been inappropriate.
In Count I, Novell alleges that Microsoft violated § 2 of the Sherman Act by willfully and wrongfully maintaining its monopoly in the PC operating system market. The Fourth Circuit described Novell’s theory as follows:
Novell contends that the technological connection between operating systems and applications gives rise to a significant barrier to entry into the operating-systems market and thus protects Microsoft’s Windows monopoly. Novell maintains that its office-productivity applications [such as WordPerfect and Quattro Pro] could perform well on a variety of operating systems and that, during the relevant time period, they were the dominant office-productivity applications in the market. The thrust of Novell’s argument is that its popular applications, though themselves not competitors or potential competitors to Microsoft’s Windows, offered competing operating systems the prospect of surmounting the applications barrier to entry and breaking the Windows monopoly. That is, Novell argues its products could provide a path onto the operating-system playing field for an actual competitor of Windows, because a competing operating system, running the popular Novell software applications, would offer consumers an attractive alternative to Windows.
Novell,
As a result of the threat Novell’s applications posed, Novell argues, as detailed above, that Microsoft engaged in the following anti-competitive conduct:
(1) Withdrawing access to information about, and otherwise changing course regarding, the Windows 95 namespace extensions, thereby delaying and impairing Novell’s development of the versions of WordPerfect and Quattro Pro that were optimized for Windows 95.
(2) Misleading Novell about Windows 95 print functionality, thereby increasing WordPerfect’s costs and decreasing its functionality.
(3) Refusing to grant a Windows 95 logo license for certain Novell software applications.
(4) Manipulating APIs to harm Group-Wise.
(5) Entering into licensing agreements with OEMs, distributors, and resellers that discouraged and/or prevented OEMs and distributors from purchasing Novell’s applications.
As a preliminary matter, I agree with Microsoft that the Complaint failed to provide notice that Novell was basing its claims in part on Microsoft’s treatment of GroupWise, and therefore any such allegation is not properly a part of this action. A complaint need only contain a “short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.”
Erickson v. Pardus,
With that matter out of the way, I turn now to the applicable legal framework for this monopolization claim. To violate § 2 of the Sherman Act,
13
the defendant must (1) have monopoly power in the relevant market and (2) engage in monopolizing conduct — that is, “willful acquisition or maintenance of that power as distinguished from growth or development as a consequence of a superior product, business acumen, or historical accident.”
Verizon Commc’n Inc. v. Law Offices of Curtis V. Trinko, LLP,
Because Microsoft’s monopoly power in the relevant market is undisputed (Dkt. No.1947 at 4 n. 3), Microsoft would be liable for monopolization under § 2 if it willfully and wrongfully maintained its monopoly — that is, engaged in anticompetitive conduct that caused anticompetitive harm.
1. Microsoft’s Anticompetitive Conduct
Novell has raised a genuine question of material fact concerning whether Microsoft’s behavior; taken as a whole, was anticompetitive.
Microsoft attacks Count I by arguing that Novell has not presented evidence that Microsoft did anything beyond refusing to cooperate with Novell, and refusing to assist a competitor is not anticompetitive conduct in violation of § 2.
Although a monopolist generally has a right to refuse to cooperate with a competitor, this right is not unqualified: a refusal to cooperate may be anticompetitive if it is an “attempt! 1 to exclude rivals on some basis other than efficiency!.]”
See Aspen Skiing Co.,
In determining whether a refusal to cooperate is impermissible, a court may consider the entirety of the monopolist’s pattern of conduct, the potential impact on consumers, and the monopolist’s motive— for example, whether the monopolist had a legitimate business justification for its actions or sacrificed short-term profits in an effort to destroy a competitor.
See id.
at 409,
Even assuming Microsoft’s conduct should be characterized as a refusal to cooperate, there is a question of fact about whether it was anticompetitive under As pen and Trinko. Microsoft’s conduct ran contrary to the preferences of operating system consumers. Just as skiers would have preferred the multi-day pass in Aspen, so too would PC users have preferred an operating system that could immediately and optimally support popular Novell applications such as WordPerfect.
Further, Novell has presented evidence of predatory motives. Just as consumer demand for the multi-day pass would have increased the monopolist’s short-term profits in
Aspen,
refraining from misleading Novell about the namespace extensions and print functionality may have increased Microsoft’s short-term profits by increasing Windows 95’s consumer appeal via allowing Novell’s popular applications to achieve better functionality on it.
{Cf.
Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 3 at 11 (Noll Expert Dec!.).) A fair inference arises that inhibiting WordPerfect’s and Quattro Pro’s ability to achieve functionality on Windows 95 was an effort to “sacrifice short-run benefits and consumer goodwill in exchange for a perceived long-run [anticompetitive impact].”
See Aspen,
(1) The history of voluntary, and therefore presumably profitable, Microsoft-Novell cooperation — both generally over the years and specifically in sharing API information pertaining to Windows 95 — to optimize application functionality on Microsoft’s operating systems. See Trinko,540 U.S. at 409 ,124 S.Ct. 872 ; see also Olympia Equip.,797 F.2d at 377 (distinguishing Aspen in part because “[t]here is no evidence that suppliers [like the defendants] customarily provide their customers with [the information the deprivation of which plaintiffs allege gave rise to an antitrust violation].... ”).
(2) The denial of the Windows 95 logo license, despite the purported availability of an exemption for the type of problems that Novell alleges caused the incompatibility. Cf. Trinko,540 U.S. at 409 ,124 S.Ct. 872 (distinguishing Aspen in part because “the services allegedly withheld were not otherwise marketed or available to the public”).
(3) The minimum purchase agreements and per system licenses with OEMs, both of which made it harder for WordPerfect and Quattro Pro to access the OEM market. 16
Microsoft also argues that it had legitimate business reasons — fostering and benefiting from innovative software development — for its actions. Although courts should be wary of interpreting antitrust laws in a way that hampers innovation, under the circumstances presented here I am not persuaded by Microsoft’s argument. Fostering innovation did not require Microsoft to deny Novell the Windows 95 logo license, nor did it necessitate misleading Novell about the APIs and print functionality. In fact, API innovations arguably would have been more valuable for both consumers and Microsoft if the ISVs had been able to use them to develop applications for Windows 95.
See Data Gen. Corp.,
In short, although, after examining the evidence, a fact-finder may agree with Microsoft that its actions were not anticompetitive under § 2, Novell has presented sufficient evidence to raise a genuine question of fact on this issue.
2. The Anticompetitive Harm Caused by Microsoft’s Anticompetitive Conduct
As discussed above, to prove a monopolization claim under § 2, the plain
In most § 2 cases, this analysis hinges on whether the exclusionary conduct harmed competition in the market in which the plaintiff was competing with the defendant.
See, e.g., Microsoft Corp.,
To satisfy this causation requirement, a plaintiff needs to show that the conduct at issue “contributed] significantly to a defendant’s continued monopoly power.”
18
See Microsoft,
Under this “contributed significantly” standard, plaintiffs need
not
“present direct proof that a defendant’s continued monopoly power is precisely attributable to its anticompetitive conduct.”
Microsoft Corp.,
Microsoft argues that Novell’s experts never expressly stated that, but for the actions that harmed WordPerfect and
Although Dr. Noll implied that the conduct that injured Novell’s software applications by itself caused anticompetitive harm in the PC operating system market, 19 it is true that he only formally concluded that such conduct contributed significantly to anticompetitive harm in light of the conduct directed at third parties. (See Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 4 at 28 (Noll Expert Reply).) In his deposition — in response to repeated questioning from Microsoft’s counsel about whether the conduct directed at Novell, in and of itself, caused “a significant or substantial impact on competition” — Dr. Noll stated, “I have not analyzed the effect of each specific act by Microsoft on competition in the market for operating systems. I have analyzed the pattern, the totality of the actions by Microsoft on the market for operating systems.” (Dkt. No.1947, Exh. 3 at 40.) Shortly thereafter, the following exchange occurred:
[Microsoft’s Counsel:] Have you analyzed the aggregate of Microsoft’s conduct that was directed against Novell’s office productivity applications in order to ascertain whether that universe, that smaller universe, just conduct against Novell’s office productivity applications, had some adverse impact on competition in the market for operating systems?
[Dr. Noll:] Had Microsoft behaved differently to all other kinds of applications of middleware vendors than it behaved towards Novell.... But all the other producers of middleware and applications had — they had dealt with them in a pro-competitive way — and facilitated the development that — of high-quality applications of middleware that were not produced by Microsoft that ran on the Windows platform, then — then I suspect there would have been no adverse effect of knocking Novell out of the industry from the actions against Novell, but that’s- — that's counter [factual.
(Dkt. No.1947, Exh. 3 at 40-43.)
Even taking that answer into account, I conclude that Dr. Noll’s proposed testimony raises a genuine issue of fact regarding whether the conduct directed at Novell was a significant contributor to anticompetitive harm in the PC operating system market. Novell has no obligation to create some “hypothetical market place,” in which none of the other ISVs or applications had been weakened by anti-competitive conduct, and then prove that the conduct at issue would still have significantly contributed to anticompetitive harm in that hypothetical market.
Cf. Microsoft Corp.,
To be sure, Novell cannot piggyback on the anticompetitive harm caused by conduct directed at third parties without actually showing the conduct which injured its applications had an anticompetitive impact as well. But Novell is not doing so. Despite Microsoft’s assertions to the contrary, implicit in Dr. Noll’s opinion is the conclusion that conduct directed at Novell, in and of itself, caused some anticompetitive harm in the PC operating system market. Dr. Noll’s deposition statement that knocking Novell out of the market alone would have “no adverse effect,” when viewed in context, is properly understood as Dr. Noll agreeing that eliminating Novell’s software applications from the market, on its own in some hypothetical market, would not have undermined Microsoft’s monopoly position. Such a conclusion is not inconsistent with a finding that Microsoft’s actions toward Novell were a significant contributor to anticompetitive harm in the PC operating system market in light of the weakened state of other applications and ISVs. (Cf, e.g., Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 3 at 9-11 (Noll Expert Deck); id., Exh. 4 at 6-7, 28 (Noll Expert Reply).) A reasonable person may disagree with Dr. Noll, but the decision whether or not to do so is within the province of a jury.
Accordingly, but for Novell selling its claims under the APA, I would have denied Microsoft’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Count I.
C.
I will now finally address Count VI. I find that, even if Novell had not assigned this claim, Microsoft would be entitled to summary judgment because the agreements at issue either were not exclusive, were not otherwise anticompetitive, or did not substantially foreclose competition in any market.
Count VI alleges that Microsoft violated § 1 of the Sherman Act 21 by entering into “agreements with OEMs and others not to license or distribute Novell’s office productivity applications or to do so only on terms that materially disadvantaged these products” thereby “unreasonably restrainfing] trade by restricting the access of Novell’s office productivity applications to significant channels of distribution^]” (Compl. ¶ 175.)
There is some indication that the parties believe that Count VI concerns only restraining trade in the
software applications markets,
not the
operating system market.
Both parties have briefed the
If this is the parties’ view of the matter, it is understandable in light of (i) Count Vi’s failure to mention the operating system market, (Compl. ¶¶ 174-77), (ii) my brief explanation as to why Count VI was tolled,
In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litig.,
The Fourth Circuit, however, apparently believed that Count VI was tolled because Novell alleged unreasonable restraint of trade in the operating system market (though the court may not have actually reached the issue).
22
See Novell,
a. Substantial Foreclosure Framework
Although Novell never expressly frames it as such, I read Count VI as essentially an allegation of exclusive dealing. 25 More specifically, I understand Count VI as alleging that Microsoft violated § 1 by entering into agreements with purchasers— OEMs, distributors, and resellers — which de facto committed those purchasers to buy software applications exclusively, or almost exclusively, from Microsoft.
Agreements violate § 1 when they unreasonably restrain trade.
See, e.g., Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc.,
b. Project Avalanche Agreements Lacked Exclusivity and Anticompetitiveness 28
To be considered “exclusive” under antitrust laws, an agreement must either expressly preclude a party from doing business with the defendant’s competitors, or highly incentivize or have the practical effect of exclusivity.
See LePage’s,
Novell has not raised a genuine issue of fact about whether the Project Avalanche agreements with distributors and resellers were exclusive. These agreements were not typical exclusive agreements such as requirements contracts or non-competition agreements. Unlike in
Masimo,
Microsoft did not offer its best discount only if distributors dealt exclusively, or close to exclusively, with Microsoft. Like any discount, the more the distributor purchased the discounted products, the greater it benefited from the discount; but there was no particularly appealing benefit hinging on exclusivity or anything close to it. Nor did these agreements directly penalize distributors and resellers for selling non-Microsoft products. Rather, Microsoft simply offered distributors a modest rebate for increasing their sales and “blended share” of Microsoft products.
{See
Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 123.) Incentivizing increased sales and share, at least to the extent that these agreements did, hardly has the “practical effect” of exclusivity. In fact, as Microsoft points out, distributors subject to these agreements were also responsible for 48 percent of Novell’s sales in 1995.
Cf. R.J. Reynolds,
Although their lack of exclusivity alone may doom their viability as a basis for § 1 liability,
see supra
note 26, the Project Avalanche agreements are also not anticompetitive by any other measure. First, these agreements warrant “less cause for anticompetitive concern” because they were “imposed on distributors rather than end users.”
Omega Envtl., Inc. v. Gilbarco, Inc.,
c. Agreements with OEMs Did Not Substantially Foreclose Competition
As discussed above, to succeed on a § 1 claim under
Tampa Electric,
a plaintiff must prove that the defendant’s conduct foreclosed competition in a “substantial” share of the relevant market.
See, e.g., Tampa Elec.,
Because the Project Avalanche agreements are not exclusive or otherwise anticompetitive, to survive summary judgment on Count VI Novell must raise a genuine issue about whether the per system and minimum purchase agreements between Microsoft and OEMs resulted in substantial foreclosure.
30
But cf. R.J. Reynolds,
ORDER
For the reasons stated in the accompanying Memorandum, it is, this SOth day of March, 2010
ORDERED
1. Defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted;
2. Plaintiffs cross-motion for summary judgment is denied; and
3. Judgment is entered in favor of defendant against plaintiff.
Notes
. The APA also assigned to Caldera claims "associated directly or indirectly with ... Related Technology,” and "Related Technology" was defined to mean technology "that is necessary to the performance by the DOS of their intended function and purpose.” Microsoft does not argue that the software application programs involved in this action constituted "Related Technology” within the meaning of the APA.
. The record suggests, and the parties implicitly agree, that tire claims asserted in Counts I and VI were not envisioned until the complaint in this action was prepared, long after the APA was executed. Although contemporaneous memoranda reflect that Novell was aware prior to entering into the APA that it had potential claims against Microsoft for antitrust damage caused to Novell’s software applications, these claims were based upon Microsoft allegedly having leveraged its monopoly in the operating system market into a monopoly or near monopoly in the applications markets. Such claims are qualitatively different from those asserted in Counts I and VI. Unquestionably, Novell retained the claims based on Microsoft leveraging its operating system market monopoly into a monopoly in the applications markets, but, as the dismissal of Counts II through V manifest, they are time barred.
. Novell also contends that the claims it is asserting in Counts I and VI are not "associated” with the DOS Products because although the DR DOS did compete in the operating system market, it was no longer being marketed and supported by Novell in October 1994, when the unlawful conduct alleged in this action began. This contention is not frivolous but it fails for several reasons. First, Novell owned DR DOS in October 1994 and its value certainly would have been affected by anticompetitive activity in the operating
. Ironically, during the discovery phase of this case, Microsoft took the position that it was entitled to inquire into matters concerning the negotiating history of the APA because under Utah law extrinsic evidence should be considered in making the threshold determination of whether contractual language is ambiguous. In
Ward v. Intermountain Farmers Ass'n,
. The inclusion of the word "indirectly” before the words "associated with” in the APA, while not dispositive, underscores the fact that there is no ambiguity in the agreement. Novell attempts to explain that "indirectly” was added to the APA on the ground that Novell did not want to be perceived as being connected with the suit filed by Caldera against Microsoft. According to Novell, a previous draft of the APA had defined the assigned claims as "any and all claims or
. For the Restatement (Second) Section 201(1) to be compatible with Utah case law, it would need to apply only where the express language of the contract is ambiguous.
See, e.g., Café Rio,
. There is at least one piece of extrinsic evidence that favors Microsoft. As indicated in note 3,
supra,
in the
Caldera
suit one of the claims for relief asserted by Caldera was for an injunction "requiring Microsoft, for a period of ten years, to disclose to all software developments the APIs for any operating system it produces, as well as any modifications, enhancements, updates, or new versions of such operating systems that the time that such products are release for beta testing.” This request for relief manifests that Caldera was taking the position, as asserted by Novell in this action, that Microsoft’s refusal to open APIs for its competitors constituted a violation of § 2 of the Sherman Act. Novell contends that this request for relief by Caldera is irrelevant for present purposes because Caldera asserted that the refusal to open APIs was
. Of course, the fact that Novell had not yet envisioned the claims that it now asserts in this action at the time the APA was executed does not mean the claims were not assigned. As previously indicated, under Utah law where the language of a contract is not ambiguous, courts are to resolve its meaning by looking within its four corners. To attempt to identify the potentialities that were known to the contracting parties at the time the agreement was entered into would, in effect, be to inquire into their subjective intentions and undermine the principle that unambiguous contract language must be construed objectively and reasonably.
See generally II E. Allan Farnsworth,
Farnsworth on Contracts Section 7.9 (3d Ed.2004). Furthermore, this result is consistent with precedent regarding assignment of antitrust claims. Although the assignment of antitrust claims must be "express,”
see, e.g., Sullivan v. Nat’l Football League,
. Microsoft also argues that the claims asserted in Counts I and VI are barred by
res judicata
because they could have been, and were not, asserted in the Caldera suit. To the extent these claims were assigned by Novell to Caldera (as I find they were), I agree with Microsoft that they are barred by
res judicata.
However, the
res judicata
argument adds nothing because the assignment of the present claims by Novell to Caldera itself prevents Novell from asserting them here,
res judicata
. Access to information about Windows 95’s APIs — which are “hooks” in an operating system that allow applications to achieve functionality within that operating system — was critical for ISVs because it allowed them to develop programs that could function within Windows 95.
. For the reasons explained in infra Section III.B, I have decided that the conduct directed at GroupWise should not be considered in analyzing of Novell’s claims.
. Although these agreements are the crux of the § 1 claim (Count VI), they may also be considered as anticompetitive behavior in the § 2 analysis (Count I). See infra note 16.
. Section 2 reads: "Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony....” 15 U.S.C. § 2.
. Some courts break a monopolization analysis into three elements: (1) monopoly power, (2) willful acquisition/maintenance of monopoly power (or "anticompetitive conduct"), and (3) causation.
See, e.g., United States v. Microsoft Corp.,
. The
Trinko
Court noted that
“Aspen Skiing
is at or near the outer boundary of § 2 liability____” The Court explained that ''[t]he unilateral termination of a voluntary
(and thus presumably profitable)
course of dealing suggested a willingness to forsake short-term profits to achieve an anticompetitive end ... [and] the defendant’s unwillingness to renew
. "Even though exclusivity arrangements are often analyzed under § 1, such exclusionary conduct may also be an element in a § 2 claim.”
LePage’s Inc. v. 3M,
. Microsoft points to two of my prior opinions to argue that "Microsoft is not required to disclose information to its competitors about new Windows operating systems under development.” I have held, in cases brought under the "essential facilities” doctrine, that Microsoft had no antitrust obligation to share information about Windows 95 with ISVs.
See In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litig.,
. At times, Microsoft seems to argue that Novell must prove that Microsoft’s conduct had a "substantial” anticompetitive impact in the operating system market,
(see
Dkt. No. 1947 at 26), which I would view as a more rigorous test than the contributed significantly standard. Increasing this burden may risk undermining the principle that "antitrust laws are for the benefit of competition.”
Cf. Morgan v. Ponder,
. (Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 4 at 32 (Noll Expert Reply) ("I do not agree that Professor Murphy has proven that the acts against Novell alone had no effect on competition for the x86 operating systems....”).)
.
(See also
Dkt. No.1952, Exh. 4 at 27 (Noll Expert Reply) ("In a 1000-firm market, the harm to any one competitor would not cause harm to competition, but that is irrelevant to ascertaining whether the entire pattern of
Microsoft seems to concede that, under some, circumstances, the anticompetitive harm caused by a defendant's anticompetitive conduct toward multiple small competitors could be aggregated to reach a significant contribution finding in the relevant market. Microsoft distinguishes itself from such a hypothetical defendant, however, by asserting that its conduct toward Novell was fundamentally different than the anticompetitive conduct Microsoft directed against other ISVs and applications. This argument is unpersuasive. I am not convinced that the conduct directed at the other ISVs is distinguishable in any material way from the conduct directed at Novell. Regardless, I do not think a defendant can avoid antitrust liability by engaging in “different” anticompetitive conduct toward each of its small competitors.
. Section 1 reads in part: "Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is declared to be illegal.” 15 U.S.C. § 1.
. The Fourth Circuit explained: "Counts I and VI ... are predicated on the theory that Microsoft's conduct injured competition in the market for PC operating systems, a market in which Novell did not directly compete. ... Section 5(i) of the Clayton Act provides that government anti-trust proceedings toll the statute of limitations for private antitrust actions 'based in whole or in part on any matter complained of by the government. Novell’s Counts I and VI are indeed based on Microsoft’s anticompetitive conduct in the PC operating-systems market, which was at issue in the DOJ complaint.”
See Novell,
. In its brief before the Fourth Circuit, Microsoft explained the procedural posture and history of Count VI:
Because Counts I and VI allege harm in the same PC operating system market at issue in the DOJ Complaint, Microsoft did not argue that those two claims were time-barred. ... There was some confusion in the district court concerning what markers) are at issue in Count VI. Although Count VI does not specify a market, it alleges that Microsoft entered into exclusionary distribution agreements in violation of [§ 1].... [S]uch a claim requires proof of harm to "competition as a whole within” at least one antitrust market. Novell provided no indication that Count VI might pertain to the PC operating system market (as opposed to the alleged applications markets) until oral argument, at which point Microsoft’s counsel immediately responded that to the extent that were so, then Count VI should be dismissed for the same reasons as Count I.
. Novell may have been able to prove restraint of trade in the operating system market by, in part, establishing substantial foreclosure in various software applications markets. To do so, however, Novell would have to prove more than just substantial foreclosure in those software applications markets; it would also have had to point to evidence showing how and why that substantial foreclosure in fact restrained trade in the operating system market.
. “Exclusive dealing occurs when ... a buyer ... agrees to purchase, license or lease all or a substantial portion of its requirements of a product or service exclusively from a particular seller.” William C. Holmes, Antitrust Law Handbook § 2:19 (2009).
. Although
Tampa Electric
involved a Clayton Act claim, its analysis pertains to exclusive dealing under § 1 of the Sherman Act as well.
See Tampa Elec.,
. Section 1 only covers ‘'contracts], combination[s] ..or conspiracy[ies].” In contrast to the pattern of unilateral conduct that was considered in analyzing the § 2 claim in Count I, agreements between Microsoft and third parties are the only allegedly anticompetitive conduct that may be considered in assessing the anticompetitive harm in Count VI.
. Microsoft also argues that the Project Avalanche agreements may not form the basis of Count VI because (1) "[h]ad Novell alleged harm to competition in channels other than the OEM channel, that allegation would have been barred by the statute of limitations because it would not have been based in whole or in part on any matter complained of in the Government case” and (2) Novell did not include such allegations in its Complaint.
As to Microsoft’s first argument, a claim arising from the Project Avalanche agreements may still have been tolled because Novell alleges that those agreements caused harm in the PC operating system market.
See Novell,
I also am unpersuaded by Microsoft's second argument. Again, a complaint need only contain a “short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.”
Erickson,
. “The relevant market for this purpose includes the full range of selling opportunities reasonably open to rivals...” Omega Envtl., \21 F.3d at 1162 (quoting 2A Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law ¶ 570bl, at 278).
. This assumes, without deciding, that these agreements with OEMs would in fact be considered exclusive or anticompetitive.
. The § 1 legality of these minimum purchase and per system agreements is distinguishable from the Section 1 legality of Microsoft’s minimum purchase, per system, per copy, and per processor agreements with OEMs covered by Judge Jackson’s consent order in 1995. In that case, the OEM agreements concerned the distribution of PC operating systems, a market in which OEMs control a substantially greater percentage of the distribution channels than they do in the various software applications markets.
See United States v. Microsoft,
. Microsoft also argues that Novell "abandoned” Count VI because it failed to offer expert evidence of the damages it suffered as a result of the conduct alleged in Count VI. (See Dkt. No. 1947 at 44.) Because Count VI may be resolved on other grounds, I did not reach this issue.
