UNITED STATES v. PABST BREWING CO. ET AL.
No. 404
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued April 27, 1966.—Decided June 13, 1966.
384 U.S. 546
John T. Chadwell argued the cause for appellees. With him on the brief were Glenn W. McGee, David A. Nelson, Joseph R. Gray and Ray T. McCann.
Thomas E. O‘Neill filed a brief for the Brewers’ Association of America, as amicus curiae, urging reversal.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1958 Pabst Brewing Company, the Nation‘s tenth largest brewer, acquired the Blatz Brewing Company, the eighteenth largest. In 1959 the Government brought this action charging that the acquisition violated § 7 of the Clayton Act as amended by the Celler-Kefauver Anti-Merger amendment.1 That section makes it unlawful for one corporation engaged in commerce to acquire the stock or assets of another “where in any line of commerce in any section of the country, the effect of such acquisition may be substantially to lessen competition, or to tend to create a monopoly.” (Emphasis supplied.) The Government‘s complaint charged that “The effect of this
I.
We first take up the court‘s dismissal based on its conclusion that the Government failed to prove either Wisconsin or the three-state area constituted “a relevant section of the country within the meaning of Section 7.”
II.
The Government‘s evidence, consisting of documents, statistics, official records, depositions, and affidavits by witnesses, related principally to the competitive position of Pabst and Blatz in the beer industry throughout the Nation, in the three-state area of Wisconsin, Illinois, and Michigan, and in the State of Wisconsin. The record in this case, including admissions by Pabst in its formal answer to the Government‘s complaint, the evidence introduced by the Government, the findings of fact and opinion of the District Judge, shows among others the following facts. In 1958, the year of the merger, Pabst was the tenth largest brewer in the Nation and Blatz ranked eighteenth. The merger made Pabst the Nation‘s fifth largest brewer with 4.49% of the industry‘s total sales. By 1961, three years after the merger, Pabst had increased its share of the beer market to 5.83% and had become the third largest brewer in the country. In the State of Wisconsin, before the merger, Blatz was the leading seller of beer and Pabst ranked fourth. The merger made Pabst the largest seller in the State with 23.95% of all the sales made there. By 1961 Pabst‘s share of the market had increased to 27.41%. This merger took place in an industry marked by a steady trend toward economic concentration. According to the District Court the number of breweries operating in the United States declined from 714 in 1934 to 229 in 1961, and the total number of different competitors selling beer has fallen from 206 in 1957 to 162 in 1961. In Wisconsin the number of companies selling beer has declined from 77 in 1955 to 54 in 1961. At the same time the number
These facts show a very marked thirty-year decline in the number of brewers and a sharp rise in recent years in the percentage share of the market controlled by the leading brewers. If not stopped, this decline in the number of separate competitors and this rise in the share of the market controlled by the larger beer manufacturers are bound to lead to greater and greater concentration of the beer industry into fewer and fewer hands. The merger of Pabst and Blatz brought together two very large brewers competing against each other in 40 States. In 1957 these two companies had combined sales which accounted for 23.95% of the beer sales in Wisconsin, 11.32% of the sales in the three-state area of Wisconsin, Illinois, and Michigan, and 4.49% of the sales throughout the country. In accord with our prior cases,4 we
We have not overlooked Pabst‘s contention that we should not consider the steady trend toward concentration in the beer industry because the Government has not shown that the trend is due to mergers. There is no duty on the Government to make such proof. It would seem fantastic to assume that part of the concentration in the beer industry has not been due to mergers but even if the Government made no such proof, it would not aid Pabst. Congress, in passing § 7 and in amending it with the Celler-Kefauver Anti-Merger amendment, was concerned with arresting concentration in the American economy, whatever its cause, in its incipiency. To put a halt to what it considered to be a “rising tide” of concentration in American business, Congress, with full power to do so, decided “to clamp down with vigor on mergers.” United States v. Von‘s Grocery Co., ante, at 276. It passed and amended § 7 on the premise that mergers do tend to accelerate concentration in an industry. Many believe that this assumption of Congress is wrong, and that the disappearance of small businesses with a correlative concentration of business in the hands of a few is bound to occur whether mergers are prohibited or not. But it is not for the courts to review the policy decision of Congress that mergers which may substantially lessen competition are forbidden, which in effect the courts would be doing should they now require proof of the congressional premise that mergers are a major cause of concentration. We hold that a trend toward
Reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring.
While I join the Court‘s opinion, I add only a word in support of the Court‘s description of the anatomy of the “relevant geographic market” for purposes of the Clayton Act. The alternative leads to a form of concentration whose ultimate reductio ad absurdum is described in the Appendix to this opinion.
APPENDIX TO CONCURRING OPINION OF MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS.
Every time you pick up the newspaper you read about one company merging with another company. Of course, we have laws to protect competition in the United States, but one can‘t help thinking that, if the trend continues, the whole country will soon be merged into one large company.
It is 1978 and by this time every company west of the Mississippi will have merged into one giant corporation known as Samson Securities. Every company east of the Mississippi will have merged under an umbrella corporation known as the Delilah Company.
It is inevitable that one day the chairman of the board of Samson and the president of Delilah would meet and discuss merging their two companies.
“If we could get together,” the president of Delilah said, “we would be able to finance your projects and you would be able to finance ours.”
“Exactly what I was thinking,” the chairman of Samson said.
The men shook on it and then they sought out approval from the Anti-Trust Division of the Justice Department.
At first the head of the Anti-Trust Division indicated that he might have reservations about allowing the only two companies left in the United States to merge.
“Our department,” he said, “will take a close look at this proposed merger. It is our job to further competition in private business and industry, and if we allow Samson and Delilah to merge we may be doing the consumer a disservice.”
The chairman of Samson protested vigorously that merging with Delilah would not stifle competition, but would help it. “The public will be the true beneficiary of this merger,” he said. “The larger we are, the more services we can perform, and the lower prices we can charge.”
The president of Delilah backed him up. “In the Communist system the people don‘t have a choice. They must buy from the state. In our capitalistic society the people can buy from either the Samson Company or the Delilah Company.”
“But if you merge,” someone pointed out, “there will be only one company left in the United States.”
“Exactly,” said the president of Delilah. “Thank God for the free enterprise system.”
The Anti-Trust Division of the Justice Department studied the merger for months. Finally the Attorney General made this ruling. “While we find some drawbacks to only one company being left in the United States, we feel the advantages to the public far outweigh the disadvantages.
“Therefore, we‘re making an exception in this case and allowing Samson and Delilah to merge.
ART BUCHWALD, Washington Post, June 2, 1966, p. A21.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, concurring.
I join the Court‘s opinion insofar as it holds the merger of Pabst and Blatz may substantially lessen competition in the beer industry in the Nation as a whole.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART joins, concurring in the result.
I concur in the judgment of reversal on the limited ground that the Government‘s evidence is sufficient to establish prima facie that Wisconsin and the tri-state area comprising Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois are both proper sections of the country in which to measure the probable effects of the acquisition of Blatz by Pabst under § 7 of the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 731, as amended, 64 Stat. 1125, 15 U. S. C. § 18 (1964 ed.). However, I am wholly unable to subscribe to the Court‘s opinion which appears to emasculate the statutory phrase “in any section of the country.”
I.
The Court is quite right in stating that the primary question in a § 7 case is whether the effect of the challenged acquisition “may substantially lessen competition.” Ante, p. 550. But any resolution of this question necessarily involves a study of statistics and other evidence bearing upon market shares, market trends, number of competitors and the like. Obviously such figures will vary depending upon what geographic area is chosen as relevant, and the possibilities for “gerry-
The cases under § 7 have established a flexible, but workable, approach to the question of geographic market. In Brown Shoe Co. v. United States, 370 U. S. 294, the Court recognized that a test for an appropriate geographic market had been prescribed by Congress, 370 U. S., at 336, and that it must “‘correspond to the commercial realities’ of the industry and be economically significant.” 370 U. S., at 336-337.1 The determination of relevant geographic market received more detailed study in United States v. Philadelphia Nat. Bank, 374 U. S. 321. The Court there saw the “proper question” as framed to ascertain “not where the parties to the merger do business or even where they compete, but where, within the area of competitive overlap, the effect of the merger on competition will be direct and immediate.” 374 U. S., at 357.
The appropriate geographic area in which to examine the effects of an acquisition is an area in which the parties to the merger or acquisition compete, and around
II.
In the case before us the Government has in my opinion made a prima facie showing that the State of Wisconsin and the three-state area3 are both relevant
As a preliminary matter, it is clear that Pabst and Blatz both carry on substantial business and are direct competitors in Wisconsin. About 13% of Pabst‘s sales in 1957, the year before the merger, were made in Wisconsin, where Pabst maintained one of its four breweries. Blatz maintained its only brewery in Wisconsin, where it sold 31% of its beer in 1957. It is thus clear that the two beers were important competitors in that area; indeed Blatz was the leading seller in Wisconsin and Pabst the fourth largest. These statistics become meaningful for antitrust purposes in the context of the further evidence showing substantial barriers to brewers who were not then selling beer in Wisconsin.
The sales statistics submitted by the Government show not only a high percentage of the Wisconsin market dominated by Pabst and Blatz, but also a pattern of local concentration in the sale of beer there and throughout the country. Wisconsin, with about the highest per capita beer consumption level in the country, was dominated by substantially the same group of brewers maintaining substantially the same market shares year after year without serious challenge from other brewers operating in other sectors of the country.4 This picture of local concentration in various regional markets is supported by evidence that brewers are able to sell the same beer in different States for different prices (exclusive of trans-
This picture of beer competition as essentially a localized or regional matter is buttressed by evidence of marketing techniques used by the industry. Beer is not a fungible commodity like wheat; product differentiation is important, and the ordinary consumer is likely to choose a particular brand rather than purchase any beer indiscriminately. The record demonstrates a recognition in the industry that a successful sales program relies to a large extent on consumer recognition and preference for particular brands, and that this preference must be built up through intensive advertising and other promotional techniques. There is evidence in the record regarding efforts by Pabst and Blatz to enter new or undeveloped markets in this way, and the inference is inescapable that were a brewer from, say, Colorado, interested in entering the Wisconsin market, a great deal of costly preliminary promotional activity would be required before sizable Wisconsin sales could be expected.
This heavy emphasis on consumer recognition and promotional techniques in the marketing of beer supports the conclusion that there does exist a substantial barrier to a new competitor in a regional market such as Wisconsin. To enter this market the new entrant must be prepared to incur considerable expense over a substantial period of time creating a distribution network and advertising his brand in order to compete more or less on a parity with an established seller in the Wisconsin market.
A further factor, the pervasive state regulation of the sale and promotion of alcoholic beverages, well documented in the record, supports the acceptability of Wisconsin as a relevant geographic market for beer. Methods of sales promotion permitted in one State are unlawful in others. State regulations govern labeling, size of containers, alcoholic content of beer, shipping procedures, and credit arrangements with wholesalers. A brewer wishing to enter the Wisconsin market does not merely start transporting beer to Milwaukee; he must comply with these various state requirements, which may differ from those in the States in which he has always dealt. Although this factor may not by itself be an effective barrier to distant competitors, it does reinforce the other factors examined in justifying the conclusion that there is a state or regional market for beer.
All of this, taken in the context of a prima facie case, supports the proposition that Wisconsin is an identifiable “section of the country” presenting impediments to the entry of new competitors and insulating those already within the market. In terms of antitrust consequences,
It should be emphasized that we are faced here only with a dismissal after the presentation of the Government‘s case. On remand, the appellees can of course attempt to refute this showing by introducing evidence demonstrating either that these asserted barriers do not in practice exist, or that when seen in light of other factors they are so unimportant that brewers who presently do not sell in the Wisconsin market are not in fact appreciably hindered from entering as effective competitors.
III.
The trial court also found that viewing the entire continental United States as the relevant market, the evidence submitted did not sustain the Government‘s contention that the acquisition may substantially lessen competition. I would not disturb that conclusion. I do not of course pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence to establish a prima facie violation of § 7 within Wisconsin or the three-state area, an issue which the District Court had no occasion to reach in view of its determination that neither of these sections was a relevant market.
For these reasons I believe the District Court erred in dismissing the complaint at the close of the Government‘s case.
MR. JUSTICE FORTAS, concurring in the result.
The District Court clearly erred in dismissing the complaint. There is ample proof that the effect of this acquisition may be substantially to lessen competition in the production and sale of beer in well-defined sections
In some situations, arithmetic as to the merging companies’ aggregate volume of sales of the commodity involved may be impressive. Sometimes, the resulting size of the conjoined companies is great. But unless it can be shown that the effect may be “substantially to lessen competition, or to tend to create a monopoly” in a specific section of the country, courts are not authorized to condemn the acquisition. Congress has been specific in at least this respect, and I cannot agree that this standard should be denigrated. Unless both the product and the geographical market are carefully defined, neither analysis nor result in antitrust is likely to be of acceptable quality. Compare majority and dissenting opinions in United States v. Grinnell Corp., post, p. 563 (involving §§ 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act).
Notes
“(a) Actual and potential competition between Pabst and Blatz in the sale of beer has been eliminated;
“(b) Actual and potential competition generally in the sale of beer may be substantially lessened;
“(c) Blatz has been eliminated as an independent competitive factor in the production and sale of beer;
“(d) The acquisition alleged herein may enhance Pabst‘s competitive advantage in the production and sale of beer to the detriment of actual and potential competition;
“(e) Industry-wide concentration in the sale of beer will be increased.”
See, e. g., Bock, Mergers and Markets 35-42 (1960); Kaysen & Turner, Antitrust Policy 101-102 (1959); Martin, Mergers and the Clayton Act 321-322 (1959).