In 1989 bоth General Electric Corporation and U.S.I. Lighting, Inc. (now known as Prescolite»Moldcast Lighting), appointed L.A.P.D., Inc., as a manufacturer’s representative for lighting products in Illinois. A “manufacturer’s representative” is an agent, which solicits orders but does not maintain an inventory. The manufacturer ships directly to the customer and pays a сommission to the agent. General Electric authorized LAPD to solicit orders for high intensity discharge products such as the sodium vapor lamps used for urban highway lighting. The trade calls these products “industrial lighting.” USI authorized LAPD to solicit orders for fluorescent and incandescent products often used inside office buildings and hospitals. The trade cаlls these products “commercial lighting.” USI does not make industrial lighting products, and since the early 1980s GE has not made commercial lighting products. Having a manufacturer’s reрresentative in common enables the firms to offer a full range of products, better competing with manufacturers that make and sell full lines.
Early in 1992 LAPD sent USI a letter ending the rеpresentation as of March 31, 1992. This was consistent with the contract, which allowed either side to walk away, for any or no reason, on 30 days’ notice. USI treated thе termination as sufficient under the contract. In May 1992 GE sent LAPD the same kind of 30-day notice that LAPD had sent to USI. This time the recipient did not accept termination. LAPD filed suit contеnding that the termination violated both the contract and the federal antitrust laws. The contract theory is that, although GE gave adequate notice, it also had a duty to act in “good faith,” which LAPD insists prevented GE from dismissing LAPD in order to have the same representative as USI. Because the contract does not require LAPD to serve as bоth firms’ representative, implementing the joint-representation plan is not in “good faith,” LAPD insists. (It also accuses USI of tortiously interfering with its contract with GE.) The antitrust theory is that GE and USI сonspired to restrain trade by agreeing to use common representatives for their products. The district court issued a series of orders eliminating various theories of liability and eventually granted summary judgment to the defendants.
The argument that an ambulatory duty of “good faith” displaces express provi
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sions of contracts in Illinois (whosе law'governs the common-law claims) comes up frequently. More often than we care to recall, we have reminded litigants that “good faith” in contract law is а gap-filling approach designed for an issue “that could not have been contemplated at the time of drafting, and which therefore was not resolved explicitly by the parties.”
Kham & Nate’s Shoes-No. 2, Inc. v. First Bank of Whiting,
As for the antitrust claim: it is very difficult to see how LAPD suffers antitrust injury. See
Atlantic Richfield Co. v. USA Petroleum Co.,
The district court found that GE and USI lack market power in commercial and industrial lighting, individually or jointly, in Illinois or elsewhere. According to' LAPD, General Electric products account for .approximately 15% of industriаl lighting sales in the Chicago area, and USI makes some 5% of the commercial lighting sales. The parties’ joint share of a consolidated “lighting market” including both lines would be approximately 10% (assuming that the two lines are equal in size). None of the litigants has computed the Herfindahl Index for this business, but we are not given any reason to supposе that the market is particularly concentrated. A 5% or 10% or 15% share of a normal market, where new firms are free to enter (and existing firms have a normal elasticity of supply) does not imply power to raise prices by curtailing output. So the Supreme Court held in
Jefferson Parish Hospital District No. 2 v. Hyde,
LAPD tries' to sidestep the defendants’ inability to charge monopoly prices by arguing that GE automatically possesses market power because it sells more than $5 million in lighting products annually. Apparently LAPD has in mind the minimum formerly used for tie-in cases. See
Fortner Enterprises, Inc. v. United States Steel Corp.,
Affirmed.
