WH-TV broadcasts a digital television signal in San Juan, Puerto Rico, competing with cable and direct-broadcast satellite services. Seeking to expand its business, it purchased set-top boxes from Zenith Electronics. These boxes, which broadcasters furnish to subscribers, convert the digital input into an analog output that TV sets can.display. Boxes may have other functions, such as presenting a. programming grid from which subscribers .can choose their favorites, and descrambling pay-per-view shows. WH-TV wanted boxes that use the digital video broadcasting (DVB) standard, so that it could mix equipment from different vendors and upgrade its broadcasting gear to take advantage of the latest features. Zenith assured WH-TV that its boxes conform to the DVB standard. By this Zenith meant the 1995 version of that standard — though WH-TV thought that Zenith meant the 1998 version, which had been adopted a year before the sales, and planned its- operations on that assumption. A trier of fact could -find that Zenith misled WH-TV or at least withheld material information and that the consequences were unhappy for WH-TV and its customers: the broadcaster lost business when customers encountered problems in using the boxes, and it was unable to substitute, other vendors’ boxes, because they did not speak the same dialect of the DVB standard. We must assume, given the posture of the ease, that serious problems existed and were Zenith’s fault.
Zenith filed suit, to collect unpaid bills for boxes it delivered; WH-TV filed a counterclaim seeking to recover for profits it says it lost because of defects in Zenith’s merchandise. After extended proceedings that we need not recount, the district court granted summary judgment in Zenith’s favor, holding that it had a right to payment under the contract while WH-TV would be unable to establish damages at trial.
Shapiro proposed to testify that, with set-top boxes meeting the 1998 DVB standard and otherwise up to snuff, WH-TV would have experienced rapid growth paralleling that of DirecTV, the leading satellite broadcaster. Shapiro’s estimate had two components: first the number of customers in San Juan who would have subscribed to DirecTV during the period 2002 through 2008, and second the percentage of those customers who would have used WH-TV instead, had WH-TV been able to offer customers service better than Zenith’s equipment allowed. Shapiro might have based at least the former on DirecTV’s actual sales in other markets, but he did not do so. Instead he proposed to testify that San Juan is “unique” and that all experience in other markets is irrelevant. He took the same approach to the second task, estimating WH-TV’s potential share of the digital-broadcasting business. WH-TV uses a technology known as multi-point multichannel digital system or MMDS. Other markets have MMDS service using equipment that meets the 1998 DVB standard, and Shapiro might have used data from these to gauge the potential for such a service in San Juan, relative to the number of potential subscribers (principally hotels plus households that lack access to cable TV service). Again, however, Shapiro made no effort to calculate the potential subscriber base or use data from other markets (other than one in Mexico, which he eyeballed but did not analyze) to inform his projection about San Juan. Each market is unique, Shapiro insisted, making experience elsewhere irrelevant.
Expert evidence is admissible under Rule 702 when “(1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.” See also
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Appellate review
of
a decision under Rule 702 is deferential, see
General Electric Corp. v. Joiner,
Judges asked' to determine whether an approach is “reliable” by the standards of science encounter the problem that we are lawyers rather than scientists. See
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
On this record one cannot exclude the possibility that some problem blocked the use of multivariate regression and other statistical tools.' But that would be surprising, and as proponent of the testimony WH-TV had a burden'of production on the subject. See
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Therm-O-Disc, Inc.,
A witness who invokes “my expertise” rather than analytic strategies widely used by specialists is not an expert as Rule 702 defines that term. Shapiro may be the world’s leading student of MMDS services, but if he could or would not explain how his conclusions met the Rule’s requirements, he was not entitled to give expert testimony. As we so often reiterate: “An expert who supplies nothing but a bottom line supplies nothing of value to the judicial process.”
Mid-State Fertilizer Co. v. Exchange National Bank,
What we have said about Shapiro’s approach goes double for WH-TV’s internal projections, which rest on its say-so rather than a statistical analysis. Like many other internal projections, these represent hopes rather than the results of scientific analysis. See
Target Market Publishing, Inc. v. ADVO, Inc.,
That leaves only the possibility of damages based on defects in the units Zenith actually furnished (as opposed to lost growth and future profits). The district judge banned evidence on that subject after WH-TV failed to respond to Zenith’s contentions interrogatory with a description of its damages theory and the proof to be employed. The judge’s sanction is one of those named by the federal rules for failure to cooperate in discovery. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(B). His decision was not an abuse of discretion.
WH-TV does not otherwise contest Zenith’s demand for payment on its invoices. Because WH-TV’s defense and counterclaim fail, it is unnecessary to discuss third-party claims and disputes involving Motorola, Inc., and General Instrument Corporation. These derivative issues are of no moment given the outcome of the principal suit.
Affirmed.
