Taylor Publishing Company (“Taylor”) sued Jostens, Inc. (“Jostens”), alleging antitrust violations and related torts. After a jury found in Taylor’s favor on all but one of its claims, the trial court granted judgment as a matter of law for Jostens. Taylor appeals, and we affirm.
I
Jostens and Taylor are competing school yearbook manufacturers. They are part of a national market with two other major competitors. Jostens has the largest market share, at somewhere between 40% and 50%. Taylor and Herff-Jones Company (“Herff-Jones”) follow, each with about 20% of the market. Walsworth has about a 10% share and LifeTouch holds a minor share. Before Herff-Jones acquired it in 1996, Delmar was another major participant. Only Jostens, Taylor, and Herff-Jones compete nationally at all educational levels.
The yearbook market is static in several regards. The customer base is fairly fixed, meaning that each company competes for business from the same schools. Also, because the business is annual, opportunities to compete are practically limited to certain times during the year. Contracts between manufacturers and schools are typically negotiated once a year, and the remainder of the year is spent preparing the individual school’s yearbook. The manufacturer’s sales representative works with school staff and students to prepare a single yearbook for the school, which is then purchased by students of that school. The entire product is shipped to the school for distribution to its students in a single shipment sometime near the end of the school year.
Schools contract with a single manufacturer at a time, meaning that once a school has chosen a manufacturer for the year, other manufacturers lose their opportunity to acquire that school as a customer until at least the next year. This combines with moderate customer loyalty to reduce the amount of customer exchange and to increase competition for available individual customers.
The relationship between school staff and-sales representatives provides a representative with several opportunities to sell services to a school and its students. The most prominent opportunity is when the initial contract is negotiated. At this time, the school commits to a single manufacturer and sets its initial specifications for that year’s yearbook. Because these specifications are typically not final, however, other opportunities to sell services arise during the preparation process. Schools frequently request modifications to their original specifications, which allows the representatives to sell additional services at extra cost.
Although it remained profitable during this period, Taylor lost market share from 1994 to 1997. Two factors allegedly contributed to this loss. First, Taylor experienced production problems in 1994 that led to late deliveries. There was testimony that these and other production problems persisted for at least one school until 1997.
Second, Taylor alleges that Jostens developed a plan in 1994 to become “the only
Taylor filed this suit against Jostens in the Eastern District of Texas in 1997. Taylor charged Jostens with attempted monopolization in violation of § 2 of the Sherman Act, price discrimination in violation of the Robinson-Patman Act, and the state law torts of tortious interference with contracts (both sales representatives’ and customers’ ' contracts), knowing participation in the breach of fiduciary duties, conspiracy in breach of duties, and unfair competition.
The case was tried before a jury, which found in Taylor’s favor on most of its claims: attempted monopolization, illegal price discrimination, tortious interference with contracts between Taylor and its employees, knowing participation 'in the breach of fiduciary duties, conspiracy in breach of duties, and unfair competition. The jury ruled in Jostens’s favor only on Taylor’s claim that Jostens tortiously interfered with its contracts with its customers. The jury awarded damages on each claim, and to avoid repetition of damages, the district • court entered judgment for Taylor on its attempted monopolization claim in the amount of $25,225,000. ■
Jostens moved for judgment as a matter of law and for a new trial. The court granted Jostens’s motion for judgment as a matter of law as to each count and vacated the judgment for Taylor.
See Taylor Publishing Co. v. Jostens, Inc.,
II
Taylor asserts that the district court erred by considering Jostens’s post-judgment motion for judgment as a matter of law (“JML”) because Jostens waived the right to file a post-judgment JML motion by not moving for Rule 50 judgment at the close of all evidence. We disagree.
A motion for JML “may be made at any time before submission of the case to the jury.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(a)(2). Rule 50(b) allows the moving party to renew that motion after judgment. It is well-established that to preserve the right to file a Rule 50(b) motion the moving party must first request JML at the close, of all evidence.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b);
Tamez v. City of San Marcos,
The requirement that a party file a motion for JML before the case is submitted to the jury, “serves two basic purposes: to enable the trial court to re-examine the sufficiency of the evidence as a matter of law if, after verdict, the court must address a motion for judgment as a matter of law, and to alert the opposing party to the insufficiency of his case before being submitted to the jury.”
Polanco,
The facts here fit within our de minimis exception. The trial lasted over six days. To accommodate the parties, witnesses from both sides were taken out of order, resulting in Taylor completing its case-in-chief after its own rebuttal case and after Jostens’s case-in-chief. Near the end of trial, Jostens inquired as to the best time for presenting its Rule 50 motion. Jostens’s attorney indicated that he wanted to present his motion after Taylor had concluded its case. The court stated that it would consider the motion timely filed, but wished to consider it “after we finish the evidence.” Jostens agreed to postpone the motion until then, and Taylor did not object.
Later that afternoon, Taylor completed its rebuttal evidence. At that point Taylor still had three pieces of video deposition testimony — the conclusion of its case-in-chief — which it wished to present the following trial day. The court allowed Jos-tens to present its Rule 50 motion orally and heard Taylor’s response. It then took the motion under advisement until the following morning of trial, and it immediately inquired about the substance of Taylor’s remaining deposition testimony.
The following morning of trial, the court reviewed the jury instructions with the parties. The court again inquired about Taylor’s remaining evidence. Taylor reaffirmed that the three video deposition excerpts would complete its case, and it again discussed the substance of those depositions. The court, noting that it had transcripts of all three depositions, determined that, because of time constraints, Taylor could only present one video excerpt and that it could introduce the other two excerpts through transcripts. After a short recess, the court denied Jostens’s Rule 50 motion. Taylor then presented its remaining evidence, and the parties made their closing arguments.
In light of these facts, we find that any noncompliance by Jostens with Rule 50(b) was “a technical, formalistic defect, not a substantive one,”
Tamez,
Given these circumstances, any deviation from full compliance with Rule 50(b)’s mandate that Jostens’s motion be made and ruled on at the close of the evidence was minor and did not frustrate the rule’s purposes. Jostens’s JML motion fully alerted the court and Taylor of the grounds on which Jostens believed the evidence was insufficient prior to the case’s submission to the jury such that Taylor was not “blindsided” by Jostens’s post-judgment renewal of the motion.
See Greenwood,
In addition to arguing that Jostens waived its right to bring a general post-judgment Rule 50 motion, Taylor argues that Jostens waived its right to raise specific claims in its post-judgment motion. A post-judgment Rule 50 motion “may hot enlarge or assert new matters not presented in the [pre-verdict] motion for directed verdict.”
Dimmitt Agri Indus., Inc. v. CPC Int’l Inc.,
Taylor cites several specific arguments which Jostens allegedly waived by faffing to mention them specifically in its initial JML motion. We have reviewed each of Taylor's waiver claims and find that on each occasion, the grounds on which Jos-tens initially claimed entitlement to JML were sufficiently similar to its post-judgment JMI~ motion to preserve them. On each occasion, both motions referred to the same evidence and same legal claim. Mand~ating any greater specificity would unnecessarily elevate technical phrasing over the actual purpose of requiring one party to challenge specific elements of the other party's case before it is submitted to the jury.
Having found that Jostens adequately preserved (1) its right to move post-jiklgment for JML and (2) its specific challenges to different aspects of the judgment,we next review the court's grant of JML to Jostens. We review this de novo, applying the same standard as the district court. See Morante v. American Gen. Fin. Ctr.,
III
Section 2 of the Sherman Act prohibits attempted monopolization. See 15 U.S.C. § 2. 1 The jury found for Taylor on its attempted monopolization claim, but the trial court granted JML on this claim in favor of Jostens.
A
An attempted monopolization claim has three elements: (1) the defendant engaged in predatory or exclusionary conduct, (2) the defendant had a specific intent to monopolize, and (3) there was a dangerous probability that the defendant would successfully attain monopoly power. See Spectrum Sports, Inc. v. McQuillan,
An attempted monopolization claim necessarily involves conduct which has not yet succeeded; otherwise, the plaintiff would bring an actual monopolization claim. See Multiflex v. Samuel Moore & Co.,
This appeal hinges on whether Jostens’s conduct is predatory.
2
“ ‘Exclusionary’ conduct is conduct, other than competition on the merits or restraints reasonably ‘necessary’ to competition on the merits, that reasonably appear[s] capable of making a significant contribution to creating or maintaining monopoly power.” 3 Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp, AntitRust Law ¶ 651, at 82 (1996);
see also Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp.,
Taylor alleges that Jostens engaged in several types of predatory conduct: (1) “sham pricing,” by luring Taylor customers away with low price offers which it would then increase by offering additional, overpriced services; (2) predatory pricing, by luring Taylor customers away with below-cost pricing; (3) predatory hiring, by approaching and luring away key Taylor sales personnel; (4) misappropriation of confidential information; and (5) inducing Taylor customers to breach their term contracts with Taylor. 3
1
Taylor’s sham pricing claim is based on Jostens’s alleged practice of inducing Taylor customers to switch their services to Jostens by offering them deceptively low prices. Taylor showed that Jostens persuaded numerous Taylor customers each year to switch to Jostens by offering them lower contract prices than Jostens offered its own renewal customers. Jostens then sold many of these former Taylor customers additional services, sometimes at above list price, which increased the original contract price. 4 There was some evidence that Jostens specifically encouraged its sellers to engage in these “upgrades” with customers to recoup the initially low contract price Jostens used to attract those customers.
Taylor argues that these sales methods involved sham pricing, whereby Jostens obtained customers by using low contract prices it had no intention of honoring. Under Taylor’s view of the facts, customers regularly change their yearbook specifications after signing the initial contract. Knowing this, Jostens attracted customers with lower-than-usual contract prices. It then recouped its discount from certain customers by aggressively encouraging them to change their specifications. Most telling, a former Jostens sales representative suggested Jostens encouraged its representatives to charge schools obtaining a discount more than list price for the upgrades in an attempt to recoup that school’s discount.
Antitrust law is rife with similar examples of what competitors find to be disreputable business practices that do not qualify as predatory behavior.
See, e.g., Buffalo Courier-Express, Inc. v. Buffalo Evening News, Inc.,
Under these facts, Taylor has not shown that the sham pricing was predatory. See
Aspen Skiing,
2
Taylor next alleges that Jostens lured Taylor customers away through predatory pricing. A predatory pricing claim has two elements: “1) the prices complained of are below an appropriate measure of the alleged [would-be] monopolist’s costs and 2) ... the alleged [would-be] monopolist has a reasonable chance of recouping the losses through below-cost pricing.”
Stearns Airport,
Taylor's main allegation of predatory pricing is that Jostens lured several Taylor customers away by giving them discounts of more than 35%. Because Taylor's average variable cost ("AVC") was allegedly ~5% of its usual price, a discount of more than 35% would be below AVC. 6 Taylor bolsters this argument by identifying aspects of Jostens's pricing practices which allegedly foster this kind of predatory pricing, including allowing its representatives to set their own prices, having them ask competitors' customers what the competitors are charging, asking the customer to set its preferred price, and giving more frequent and deeper discounts to new customers than it gives to its repeat customers.
Taylor expert Bryan Jones testified that Jostens lured away up to twenty-seven customers per year between 1995 and 1997. These lost customers represented a tiny portion of Taylor's total business, as Jones also testified that Taylor had at least 6,500 customers during each of the relevant years. Thus, Taylor never lost more than two-fifths of one-percent of its customers to Jostens's below-cost pricing in any one year. 7
On these facts, Taylor cannot show that Jostens could recoup the money it lost through its below-cost pricing. See id. at 528. To show recoupment, the plaintiff must "demonstrate that the scheme could actually drive the competitor out of the market" and that "the surviving monopolist could then raise prices to consumers long enough to recoup his costs without drawing new entrants to the market." Id. at 528-29. This is impossible here given the minimal below-cost pricing in which Jostens engaged.
8
See id. at 529 (finding no possibility of driving competitors from the market, in part because of the isolated nature of the predatory pricing; the plaintiff showed underpricing on five bids out of a total of between 240 and 400 bids); cf. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio,
We have previously rejected predatory pricing claims under similar circumstances. In
Bayou Bottling, Inc. v. Dr. Pepper Co.,
3
Taylor also points to Jostens’s hiring of several key Taylor sales personnel as predatory conduct. Taylor asserts that Jostens approached and hired key Taylor employees without a valid business purpose in an effort to “convert” Taylor customers to Jostens and acquire confidential information.
The record indicates that Jostens went to substantial lengths to acquire the services of many Taylor employees, from mid-level executives to sales representatives. 10 Taylor’s primary complaint is Jostens’s hiring of three key former Taylor sales representatives: Jeff Graffam, Dan DeFal-co, and Jan DeFalco (née Day).
“[H]iring talent cannot generally be held exclusionary even if it does weaken actual or potential rivals and strengthen a monopolist ... [because] there is a high social and personal interest in maintaining a freely functioning market for talent.” 3 Areeda & Hovenkamp ¶ 702b, at 141;
see also Adjusters Replace-A-Car v. Agency Rent-A-Car, Inc.,
Taylor also argues that Jostens’s hiring conduct was predatory because it was designed to induce former employees to breach common law duties of loyalty and contractual non-compete clauses. As described above, the mere hiring away of a rival’s employees is legal under the antitrust laws in part because of the desirability of maintaining a free, market for an employee to sell her. talents. However:
No similar virtue would redeem efforts to induce such disloyal performance by a rival’s employee as .disclosure of trade secrets or other private information; steering customers, researchers, or others away from her employer and to the monopolist; physical or psychological sabotage; or intentionally lax performance.
3A Areeda & Hovenkamp ¶ 782e, at 264;
see also Associated Radio,
The record provides- significant evidence that Jostens expected former Taylor employees to steer their former customers away from Taylor and toward Jostens, no matter what their remaining commitments to Taylor. Specifically, the record contains significant evidence that Jostens expected the DeFalcos (even though they had non-compete agreements with Taylor) and Graffam to “convert” their accounts to Jostens. Moreover, the record reflects that Jostens attempted to hire away many more of Taylor’s sales employees for similar purposes, and that Jostens contemplated circumventing non-compete agreements in an arguably legal, but certainly dubious, manner. 12
Here, despite the fact that Dan DeFalco worked for Taylor for several weeks after accepting a position with Jostens, there is no evidence that Jostens induced either him or Graffam to persuade Taylor’s customers to switch to Jostens during this time period. However, there is substantial evidence that Jostens desired to circumvent, either directly or subtly, both Dan and Jan DeFalco’s non-compete agreements and convert their accounts to Jos-tens, at least in part using the goodwill developed by these individuals while at Taylor. 13 While it is unclear whether either DeFalco actually violated his or her non-compete agreements, the record reflects that Jostens anticipated a de facto, if not a direct, violation which would benefit Jostens.
The district court held that these specific acts were not predatory practices in the antitrust sense because of a lack of evidence that “the actual effect [of these practices] was significant.”
See Taylor,
The district court’s interpretation of the law came expressly from our decision in Associated Radio, and our statement that:
[T]he concept of “exclusionary” practice would become totally unmanageable unless the judges are willing to adopt a de minimis test and to ignore those practices that seem unlikely to have made a substantial impact upon the achievement, maintenance, or expansion of monopoly power.
Associated Radio,
The district court overturned the jury’s finding of exclusionary conduct because Taylor only alleged that Jostens raided 1.5% of its sales force, resulting in a loss of less than 1% of Taylor’s customers; therefore, Jostens’s “hiring of the 3 representatives had a negligible impact upon [Taylor’s] competitive position.”
Taylor,
We hold, therefore, that this component of Jostens’s actions — attacking Taylor employees with the intent to circumvent non-compete clauses and convert Taylor accounts to Jostens — constituted exclusionary conduct because it could, if fully successful, affect competition. This, of course, is not dispositive of the § 2 claim, because exclusionary practices only produce antitrust liability in attempt cases if there is inter alia, evidence that the practices caused Taylor specific injury. See infra Part III.B (discussing § 4 civil liability).
4
Taylor also argues that Jostens’s practice of acquiring confidential Taylor information is predatory conduct. The district court found that while Taylor had provided evidence that Jostens “possessed confidential information of [Taylor],” since Taylor had only claimed damages from this amounting to 2% of its total sales, this conduct “does not rise to the level of contributing significantly to creating or maintaining monopoly power.”
Taylor,
As the district court found, it is clear from the record that Jostens acquired substantial amounts of Taylor’s confidential information. For the most part, the information acquired by Jostens described Taylor’s manufacturing processes, general sales practices, goals, and objectives. Jos-tens taught courses at its training center, “Jostens University,” based in part on such information. Those courses, often taught by former Taylor employees, included “Selling Against Taylor” and “Tay-
A review of the record shows that Jos-tens acquired much of this Taylor information in ways that can best be described as dubious. For example, Jostens somehow acquired a copy of Taylor's confidential strategic plan and objectives for 1996. At trial, when asked about how it had acquired this information, Thornton testified that he had investigated its source but had concluded that "virtually it was untraceable." Thornton's testimony provides the only explanation for how Jostens acquired this information: a copy of this confidential Taylor document was placed in a brown paper bag and left for a Jostens official at a hotel desk.
Other information was acquired by more conventional means. Jostens frequently debriefed former Taylor employees shortly after it had hired them away from Taylor. The most egregious example identified by Taylor occurred when, less than a week after he was hired by Jostens, former Taylor employee Stephen Garner (who did not have a confidentiality agreement with Taylor) was flown from his home in Topeka to the Jostens division headquarters in Minneapolis to speak about Taylor. Garner there presented a written report on his former employer, which was distributed to Jostens sales managers and other key personnel. The de-briefing of former Taylor employees once they had become part of Jostens's sales force appears to have been common, and may have included the disclosure of some of the Taylor documents found in Jostens's files.
As described above, the district court held that Jostens's acquisition of confidential Taylor information was not predatory in the antitrust sense because, at best, it had only caused Taylor to lose less than 2% of its market share. However, this determination again misinterpreted the meaning of a "predatory practice" in attempted monopolization cases. Plaintiffs in these cases need not produce evidence of a substantial actual effect to prove that a practice was exclusionary; rather, they must prove that a practice could potentially harm competition, as opposed to harming a particular competitor. See Multiflex,
We agree with the district court, however, that Taylor failed to introduce sufficient evidence to prove that acquisition of information concerning Taylor's manufacturing processes, sales techniques, strategies, and goals would harm the market as a whole rather than a particular competitor. A competitive market "is harmed when conduct obstructs the achievement of competition's basis goals-lower prices, better products, and more efficient production methods." Data General Corp. v. Grumman Sys. Support Corp.,
5
Taylor also asserts that Jostens's interference with Taylor's contracts with many of its customers was exclusionary.
In light of an abundance of evidence supporting that view, we cannot say that the jury erred in finding that Jostens did not interfere with Taylor’s term agreements with its customers. Even if we could, however, we note that the leading treatise on the subject argues that such interference should not be an exclusionary practice cognizable under § 2.
[Wjhile it may be a tort for a defendant to induce another to deal in violation of its contract with the defendant’s rival, it should not be an exclusionary practice .... Th[e] competitive effect is neither increased nor decreased when the resource owner or customer is or is not contractually bound against making that transfer. If there is a tort, so be it. But antitrust law should not make liability depend on the existence or nonexistence of contracts that do not affect the competitive results.
3A Areeda & Hovenkamp ¶ 782m, at 269. Accordingly, Taylor’s argument that Jos-tens interfered with term agreements it had with its customers and therefore is guilty of exclusionary conduct fails.
6
To summarize, we find that only Jos-tens’s hiring practices were predatory. Jostens’s sham pricing was not predatory because it was not deceptive or fraudulent. Jostens’s below-cost pricing was not predatory because Taylor did not show that Jostens could recoup its below-cost prices. Taylor’s misappropriation claim failed because Taylor failed to produce evidence that the information Jostens acquired could be used in the marketplace to harm competition. Taylor’s interference with term contracts claim failed because of the lack of evidence that Jostens in fact interfered with Taylor’s term contracts.
Nor were these practices predatory when combined.
Cf. Associated Radio,
Even though we find that Jostens engaged in some predatory conduct, we find that Taylor’s § 2 claim fails because, as described below, Taylor has not shown that its injuries were caused by Jostens’s conduct. As a result, we do not reach whether Jostens intended to monopolize the relevant market or whether there was a dangerous probability it would succeed.
B
Taylor maintained its cause of action under § 4 of the Clayton Act.
See
15 U.S.C. § 15;
Nichols v. Mobile Bd. of Realtors, Inc.,
"Although the question of causation is generally a factual question for the jury, a court should direct a verdict where the plaintiff has failed to present substantial evidence that defendant's illegal practices were a material cause of plaintiffs injuries." Comfort Trane Air Conditioning Co. v. Trane Co.,
Jostens argues, and the district court agreed, that Taylofs minimal losses to Jostens were due to Taylor's service problems rather than due to Jostens's anti-competitive behavior. See Taylor,
As Taylor failed to provide sufficient evidence that the Jostens practice we have identified as predatory-representative raiding-materially contributed to its injuries, Taylor's attempted monopolization claim fails as a matter of law.
Iv
The trial court aLso found insufficient evidence to support the jury's finding
As noted above, Taylor did not show that Jostens had a reasonable chance of recouping money lost through its below-cost pricing. Thus, the district court correctly granted JMI~ to Jostens on the Robinson-Patman Act claim.
V
Finally, Taylor challenges the district court's grant of JML on its state law claims of unfair competition, knowing participation in the breach of fiduciary duty, and conspiracy to breach fiduciary duty.
A
Taylor argued that Jostens committed the tort of unfair competition under Texas law when it engaged in sham pricing with Taylor customers. Taylor argues that Jostens was able to succeed in its sham pricing scheme through its misappropriation of Taylor's pricing information. The court overturned the jury verdict on this claim and granted judgment as a matter of law to Jostens.
Unfair competition under Texas law "is the umbrella for all statutory and nonstatutory causes of action arising out of business conduct which is contrary to honest practice in industrial or commercial matters." American Heritage Life Ins. Co. v. Heritage Life Ins. Co.,
B
Taylor argues that there was sufficient evidence to support the jury verdict on its claim that Jostens knowingly participated and conspired in former Taylor employees' breach of fiduciary duties and duty of loyalty. The district court overturned the jury verdict on this claim because, even assuming that Taylor had produced cvi-
Taylor argues that the district court applied the incorrect legal standard because in breach of fiduciary duty cases, “every case requires a flexible and imaginative approach to the problem of damages.”
University Computing Co. v. Lykes-Youngstown Corp.,
Taylor offered evidence that Jostens acquired confidential information and that, during a similar time frame, Jostens’s market share increased and Taylor lost customers. However, absent was any evidence to prove that Taylor’s losses or Jostens gains were caused by Jostens’s acquisition of confidential information. Taylor argues that the law recognizes a sort of res
ipsa loquitur
for breach of fiduciary cases in that if a breach and damages are proven, causation is assumed. However, all of the cases cited by Taylor reject this proposition, expressly recognizing the need to prove causation before a flexible approach to damages is relevant.
See Molex, Inc. v. Nolen,
VI
For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law to Jostens. We dismiss Jostens’s cross-appeal as moot.
Notes
. Section 2 provides in its entirety that:
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, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10,000,000 if a corporation, or, if any other person, $350,000, or by imprisonment not exceeding three years, or by both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.
Id.
. We use the terms "predatory” and "exclusionary” interchangeably to refer to conduct which can support an attempted monopolization claim under § 2 of the Sherman Act.
Taylor attempts to use its evidence of intent to bolster its proof of predatory conduct. In certain circumstances, a showing of intent may be relevant to establishing predatory conduct.
See
3A Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law § 805c, at 326 (1996) ("[I]ntent retains its customary role as an aid in characterizing ambiguous conduct.”);
id.
§ 806e, at 337 (discussing the relationship between market power and conduct). While we have endorsed this approach in the past,
see,
e.g.,
Lehrman v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
Taylor’s intent evidence does not sufficiently explain Jostens's conduct, for example, by explaining why Jostens engaged in below-cost pricing. Cf., e.g., id. (discussing the defendant's "motivation in denying price support to Lehrman”); 3A Areeda & Hovenkamp § 805c, at 325 (giving an example of how the defendant's purpose for engaging in specific conduct might make conduct that otherwise seems predatory be non-predatoiy). Instead, it merely identifies a general intent by Jostens to become the dominant market participant.
In addition to determining that none of Jostens's conduct was predatory, the district court ruled on the other elements of Taylor's Sherman Act claim: intent and dangerous probability of success. On appeal, the parties dispute the district court’s dangerous probability finding, but in light of our disposition here, we do not reach this issue.
. Taylor argued below that Jostens engaged in predatory disparagement of Taylor's services. Taylor does not renew this argument on appeal, and thus we do not consider it.
. Taylor expert Bryan Jones testified that Jos-tens "upgraded” 80% of the customers it attracted from Táylór. Significantly, however, he testified that only 25% of these customers ended up paying more on their Jostens contract than they paid the previous year on their Taylor contract.
. Additionally, Jostens could never obtain a monopoly through this conduct. See 3A Aree-da & Hovenkamp § 806a, at 327 (“Regardless of the defendant’s power or intent, its conduct may be incapable of producing monopoly, and thus unable to satisfy the attempt requirement.”). Customers actually upset about the ultimate prices and services they obtained could switch back to another manufacturer.
. We have endorsed average variable cost as an appropriate measure of below-cost pricing for purposes of determining predatory pricing. See id. at 532. "Average variable cost is the costs that vary with changes in output divided by the output." International Air Industries, Inc. v. American Excelsior Co.,
. Jones testified that Taylor had 7,337 customers in 1994, 6,977 in 1995, 6,832 in 1996, and 6,576 in 1997. He stated that Taylor lost the following nunibers of customers to Jos-tens's below-cost pricing: twenty-seven in 1995, twenty-six in 1996, and thirteen in 1997.
. This same shortcoming applies in even greater measure to Taylor's challenge to a Jostens promotional contest. In return for potential customers agreeing to a sales meeting with a Jostens representative, the customers were entered in a drawing to be one of four schools nationwide (one in each of four geographic regions) to receive a year's worth of free yearbooks from Jostens. This very limited promotion presented no risk of driving Taylor from the market and thereby allowing Jostens to recoup" the allegedly predatory discounts. See Buffalo Courier-Express,
. William Avera, a Taylor expert, testified that Jostens's below-cost pricing harmed Taylor beyond simply depriving it of some customers. Avera stated that Taylor was also harmed when it was forced to match Jostens’s prices to retain some of its other customers. Taylor’s ability to retain customers in this manner shows that Jostens could not recoup its below-cost prices by "driving [Taylor] from the market, or ... causing [it] to raise [its] prices to supracompetitive levels within a disciplined oligarchy.”
Brooke Group,
. For example, notes from an interview between a Jostens executive and former Taylor employee Cole Harris reflect an occasion where Jostens asked Harris to describe 42 Taylor sales representatives to Jostens, their respective accounts, and their effectiveness. In those notes, which Jostens used to choose which Taylor sales representatives to pursue, Jostens noted that Dan DeFalco was the "lynchpin" of the organization, that school principals "love him and are addicted to him," and that it "would be a coup to get him.”
. As an example of when the hiring away of a competitor’s employees would become predatory, Areeda and Hovenkamp describe a dominant computer software firm who hires away all of its rivals’ best programmers and, because it has enough of its own programmers, employs them as custodians paid the salaries of computer programmers i rather than custodians. See 3 Areeda & Hovenkamp ¶ 702c, at 143. The case at bar is not analo- . gous; rather, it would be equivalent to the dominant computer software firm hiring its rivals’ best programmers and promoting them to supervisory roles in which they would use their skills to the company's benefit.
. For example, Jostens sought to hire Taylor employee Thurlow Cooper, have him ''convert” his accounts to Jostens without direct participation to avoid violating his non-compete agreement with Taylor, and then take the accounts over, once the term of that agreement ended. Jostens stated that:
If we converted all of [Cooper's] business (I believe we would because Jeff Graffam will just roll over like he did for Cole), and split °%o, that would be $25,000 toward the $40,000 [we would have to pay Cooper to compensate him for his lost commissions for leaving Taylor].... After two years [once his non-compete agreement had ended] Mr. Cooper would get the business backat full commission. ... This scenario, to me at least, would seem to be in the best interest of everyone involved with the exception of [Taylor].
. This evidence includes: (1) the memorandum stating that Dan DeFalco coming over to Jostens “would bring over his $1.4 million, beginning with next Fall’s deliveries,” despite his non-compete agreement; (2) the fact that the DeFalcos' conduct after moving to Jostens allowed Taylor to obtain a preliminary injunction from a federal judge in the Eastern District of Virginia preventing further violations of their non-compete agreements; and (3) the memorandum describing in detail how Jos-tens would get around Taylor employee Thur-low Cooper’s non-compete agreement.
. Thornton admitted as much during his testimony at trial.
. Taylox's inability to show the necessary tort or criminal act underpinning its unfair competition claim is illustrated by its misreliance on cases involving misappropriation of trade names. In these cases, the defendant falsely sells goods under the plaintiff's trade name, thereby deceiving customers. See, e.g., Hudgens v. Goen,
