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Analysis – Fifth Circuit Limits the Sherman Act: ‘Disreputable’ is not ‘Anticompetitive’

December 6, 2016 Mark Curriden

By David Coale of Lynn Pinker Cox & Hurst

(Dec. 6) – The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit last Friday reversed a $340 million antitrust judgment and placed significant limits on the activity to which antitrust laws apply in Retractable Technologies Incorporated v. Beckton Dickinson & Co.

RTI sued a fellow syringe-maker for false advertising under the Lanham Act, alleging that BD attempted to monopolize the syringe market in violation of section 2 of Sherman Act. At trial, the jury agreed with RTI and hit BD with a verdict amplified by treble damages as allowed under the statute.

David Coale
David Coale
The Fifth Circuit, in a ruling authored by Judge Edith Jones, said that the antitrust verdict in RTI’s favor “rest[ed] upon three types of ‘deception’ by its rival: [1] patent infringement . . . [2] two false advertising claims made persistently; and [3] BD’s alleged ‘tainting the market’ for retractable syringes in which it alone competed with RTI.”

The three-judge panel found that each of these three liability theories failed.

First, as to patent infringement, the court observed that by its very nature, a patent grants a limited monopoly. Thus, “patent infringement invades the patentee’s monopoly rights, causes competing products to enter the market, and thereby increases competition,” meaning that it “is not an injury cognizable under the Sherman Act.”

Second, the false advertising charges involved BD’s admittedly inaccurate claims to have the “world’s sharpest” needles with “low waste space.” But the Fifth Circuit, quoting Stearns Airport Equip. Co. v. FMC Corp., said while these statements “may have been wrong, misleading, or debatable,’ . . . they were all “arguments on the merits, indicative of competition on the merits.”

After a thorough analysis of different standards used to evaluate antitrust claims based on allegedly false advertising, the court concluded: “The broader point . . . is the distinction embodied in our precedents between business torts, which harm competitors, and truly anticompetitive activities, which harm the market.” RTI did not make such a showing here.

Finally, the “taint” claim alleged that BD refused to make needed repairs to its retractable needle design, in hopes of persuading purchasers that all such syringes – including RTI’s – were inherently unreliable, until some time after RTI’s patents expired and BD could use RTI’s design to revitalize and take over the retractable syringe market.

The court called this theory “illogical,” since selling a bad product would only serve to benefit RTI’s competitors and would not serve BD well in any attempt to expand its brand once RTI’s technology became available.

While reversing on the antitrust claim and the substantial damages associated with it, the court went on to remand for reconsideration any Lanham Act remedies for false advertising might still be appropriate.

Judges Jacques Wiener and Stephen Higginson joined Jones in the unanimous opinion.

This case is a forceful reminder that a good business tort claim does not equate to a good antitrust claim – or, even any antitrust claim at all. It is also a reminder of two broader points about how the Fifth Circuit approaches business tort claims arising from federal law.

On the one hand, that court allows vigorous litigation of federal claims within their proper boundaries, as it recently did in affirming a nine-figure judgment arising from an antitrust conspiracy claim in MM Steel LP v. JSW Steel (USA), Inc.. (Notably, Judge Stephen Higginson, who was on the panel in the Retractable case, wrote the opinion in MM Steel.)

On the other hand, the Fifth Circuit carefully polices the boundaries of those claims, as it did here, and as it also did in its painstaking comparison between state law trade secret claims and federal copyright claims in Globeranger Corp. v. Software AG. The “siren song” of treble damages under the Sherman Act is a compelling one, but the pathway to such damages is carefully guarded.

David Coale is an appellate law expert at Lynn Pinker Cox & Hurst and authors the popular Fifth Circuit blog 600Camp.

Mark Curriden

Mark Curriden is a lawyer/journalist and founder of The Texas Lawbook. In addition, he is a contributing legal correspondent for The Dallas Morning News.

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