UNITED STATES STEEL CORP. ET AL. v. FORTNER ENTERPRISES, INC.
No. 75-853
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued November 1, 1976-Decided February 22, 1977
429 U.S. 610
Kenneth L. Anderson argued the cause for respondent. With him on the briefs was A. Scott Hamilton, Jr.
In exchange for respondent‘s promise to purchase prefabricated houses to be erected on land near Louisville, Ky., petitioners agreed to finance the cost of acquiring and developing the land. Difficulties arose while the development was in progress, and respondent (Fortner) commenced this treble-damages action, claiming that the transaction was a tying arrangement forbidden by the Sherman Act. Fortner alleged that competition for prefabricated houses (the tied product) was restrained by petitioners’ abuse of power over credit (the tying product). A summary judgment in favor of petitioners was reversed by this Court. Fortner Enterprises v. United States Steel Corp., 394 U. S. 495 (Fortner I). We held that the agreement affected a “not insubstantial” amount of commerce in the tied product and that Fortner was entitled to an opportunity to prove that petitioners possessed “appreci-
The conclusion that a violation of § 1 of the Sherman Act2 had been proved was only reached after two trials. At the first trial following our remand, the District Court directed a verdict in favor of Fortner on the issue of liability, and submitted only the issue of damages to the jury. The jury assessed damages, before trebling, of $93,200. The Court of Appeals reversed the directed verdict and remanded for a new trial on liability. 452 F. 2d 1095 (CA6 1971), cert. denied, 406 U. S. 919. The parties then waived the jury; the trial judge heard additional evidence, and entered extensive findings of fact which were affirmed on appeal. 523 F. 2d 961 (1975). Both courts held that the findings justified the conclusion that petitioners had sufficient economic power in the credit market to make the tying arrangement unlawful.
I
Only the essential features of the arrangement between the parties need be described. Fortner is a corporation which was activated by an experienced real estate developer for the purpose of buying and improving residential lots. One petitioner, United States Steel Corp., operates a “Home Division” which manufactures and assembles components of prefabricated houses; the second petitioner, the “Credit Corp.,” is a wholly owned subsidiary, which provides financing to customers of the Home Division in order to promote sales. Although their common ownership and control make it appropriate to regard the two as a single seller, they sell two separate products-prefabricated houses and credit. The credit extended to Fortner was not merely for the price of the homes. Petitioners agreed to lend Fortner over $2,000,000 in exchange for Fortner‘s promise to purchase the components of 210 homes for about $689,000. The additional borrowed funds were intended to cover Fortner‘s cost of acquiring and
The impact of the agreement on the market for the tied product (prefabricated houses) is not in dispute. On the one hand, there is no claim-nor could there be-that the Home Division had any dominance in the prefabricated housing business. The record indicates that it was only moderately successful, and that its sales represented a small fraction of the industry total.3 On the other hand, we have already held that the dollar value of the sales to respondent was sufficient to meet the “not insubstantial” test described in earlier cases. See 394 U. S., at 501-502. We therefore confine our attention to the source of the tying arrangement-petitioners’ “economic power” in the credit market.
II
The evidence supporting the conclusion that the Credit Corp. had appreciable economic power in the credit market relates to four propositions: (1) petitioner Credit Corp. and the Home Division were owned by one of the Nation‘s largest corporations; (2) petitioners entered into tying arrangements with a significant number of customers in addition to Fortner; (3) the Home Division charged respondent a noncompetitive price for its prefabricated homes; and (4) the financing provided to Fortner was “unique,” primarily because it covered 100% of Fortner‘s acquisition and development costs.
The Credit Corp. was established in 1954 to provide financing for customers of the Home Division. The United States Steel Corp. not only provided the equity capital, but also allowed the Credit Corp. to use its credit in order
The Credit Corp.‘s loan policies were primarily intended to help the Home Division sell its products.4 It extended credit only to customers of the Home Division, and over two-thirds of the Home Division customers obtained such financing. With few exceptions, all the loan agreements contained a tying clause comparable to the one challenged in this case. Petitioner‘s home sales in 1960 amounted to $6,747,353. Since over $4,600,000 of these sales were tied to financing provided by the Credit Corp.,5 it is apparent that the tying arrangement was used with a number of customers in addition to Fortner.
The least expensive house package that Fortner purchased from the Home Division cost about $3,150. One witness testified that the Home Division‘s price was $455 higher than the price of comparable components in a conventional home; another witness, to whom the District Court made no reference in its findings, testified that the Home Division‘s price was $443 higher than a comparable prefabricated product. Whether the price differential was as great as 15% is not entirely clear, but the record does support the conclusion that the contract required Fortner to pay a noncompetitive price for the Home Division‘s houses.
The finding that the credit extended to Fortner was unique
The District Court also found that banks and federally insured savings and loan associations generally were prohibited by law from making 100% land acquisition and development loans, and “that other conventional lenders would not have made such loans at the time in question since they were not prudent loans due to the risk involved.” App. 1596.
Accordingly, the District Court concluded “that all of the required elements of an illegal tie-in agreement did exist since the tie-in itself was present, a not insubstantial amount of interstate commerce in the tied product was restrained and the Credit Corporation did possess sufficient economic power or leverage to effect such restraint.” Id., at 1602.
III
Without the finding that the financing provided to Fortner was “unique,” it is clear that the District Court‘s findings would be insufficient to support the conclusion that the Credit Corp. possessed any significant economic power in the credit market.
Although the Credit Corp. is owned by one of the Nation‘s largest manufacturing corporations, there is nothing in the record to indicate that this enabled it to borrow funds on terms more favorable than those available to competing lenders, or that it was able to operate more efficiently than other lending institutions. In short, the affiliation between the petitioners does not appear to have given the Credit Corp. any cost advantage over its competitors in the credit market. Instead, the affiliation was significant only because the Credit Corp. provided a source of funds to customers of the Home Division. That fact tells us nothing about the extent of petitioners’ economic power in the credit market.
The same may be said about the fact that loans from the Credit Corp. were used to obtain house sales from Fortner and others. In some tying situations a disproportionately large volume of sales of the tied product resulting from only a few strategic sales of the tying product may reflect a form of economic “leverage” that is probative of power in the market for the tying product. If, as some economists have suggested, the purpose of a tie-in is often to facilitate price discrimination, such evidence would imply the existence of power that a free market would not tolerate.7 But in this case Fortner was only required to purchase houses for the number of lots for which it received financing. The tying product produced no commitment from Fortner to purchase varying quantities of the tied product over an extended period of time. This record, therefore, does not de-
The fact that Fortner-and presumably other Home Division customers as well-paid a noncompetitive price for houses also lends insufficient support to the judgment of the lower court. Proof that Fortner paid a higher price for the tied product is consistent with the possibility that the financing was unusually inexpensive9 and that the price for the entire package was equal to, or below, a competitive price. And this possibility is equally strong even though a number of Home Division customers made a package purchase of homes and financing.10
Without any such advantage differentiating his product from that of his competitors, the seller‘s product does not
“We do not mean to accept petitioner‘s apparent argument that market power can be inferred simply because the kind of financing terms offered by a lending company are ‘unique and unusual.’ We do mean, however, that uniquely and unusually advantageous terms can reflect a creditor‘s unique economic advantages over his competitors.” 394 U. S., at 505.
An accompanying footnote explained:
“Uniqueness confers economic power only when other competitors are in some way prevented from offering the distinctive product themselves. Such barriers may be legal, as in the case of patented and copyrighted products, e. g., International Salt; Loew‘s, or physical, as when the product is land, e. g., Northern Pacific. It is true that the barriers may also be economic, as when competitors are simply unable to produce the distinctive product profitably, but the uniqueness test in such situations is somewhat confusing since the real source of economic power is not the product itself but rather the seller‘s cost advantage in producing it.” Id., at 505 n. 2.
Quite clearly, if the evidence merely shows that credit terms are unique because the seller is willing to accept a lesser profit-or to incur greater risks-than its competitors,
The unusual credit bargain offered to Fortner proves nothing more than a willingness to provide cheap financing in order to sell expensive houses.15 Without any evidence that the Credit Corp. had some cost advantage over its competitors-or could offer a form of financing that was significantly differentiated from that which other lenders could offer if they so elected-the unique character of its financing does not support the conclusion that petitioners had the kind of economic power which Fortner had the burden of proving in order to prevail in this litigation.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
So ordered.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, with whom MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST joins, concurring.
I concur in the Court‘s opinion and write only to emphasize what the case before us does not involve; I join on the basis of my understanding of the scope of our holding. Today‘s decision does not implicate ordinary credit sales of only a single product and which therefore cannot constitute a tying arrangement subject to per se scrutiny under § 1 of the Sherman Act. In contrast to such transactions, we are dealing here with a peculiar arrangement expressly found by the Court in Fortner I to involve two separate products sold by
