ClassNotesAntitrustBrunell

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Thursday, July 11, 2002 (Class 13) =


Problem 6.1 ==

(cb636)

* Three gas stations at one intersection, nearest gas station is 30 miles away. A and B accues C of monopolization. Parties stipulate that market include only these stations.
* C has sold 2000 galloons, A and B have each sold 500 gallons.
* C has 8 pumps, A and B each have 6 pumps.
* Each pump accommodates 40 cars daily, with 10 gallons average sale per car.
* A and B's capacity: 2400 gallons, C capacity: 3200 gallons.
* C can't raise prices too much, however, since A and B can undercut and keep customers.
* Market share should really be measured by sales/capacity = 2000/6800 = 29%.

United States v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.




[351 U.S. 377] 1956 United States Supreme Court (cb636)

* Market in question: flexible wrapping materials
* If commodities are reasonably interchangeable, then they are in same market.
* Government's argument: items cannot be in same market since they have different properties and are priced differently.
* If there is a degree of cross-elasticity for products, should they be in the same market? Court seems to think yes, known as cellophane fallacy.
* Dissent: Du Pont's pre-tax profit was 31%. There must have been barriers to entry that allowed Du Pont to earn such high profits.
* Cigarettes makers have inelastic demand for cellophane, but doesn't make sense to treat them as separate market, because normally seller can't discriminate on price.

Telex Corp. v. IBM Corp.




[510 F.2d 894] 1975 2d Circuit Court of Appeals (cb645)

* Issue of whether market was peripherals for IBM or for all computers.
* Makers of non-IBM peripherals could easily switch to make IBM peripherals--cost for switching would be less than 1% of product purchase price--supply was elastic, thus IBM was not monopolist.

Friday, July 12, 2002 (Class 14) =


United States v. Grinnell Corp. ==

[384 U.S. 563] 1966 United States Supreme Court (cb653)

* Company offers burglary and fire protection services, with central station calling system.
* 'Commercial realities' may dictate that services need to be bundled together.
* How to determine whether night watchman service is in same market as central office protection? Could look at cross-elasticity of demand.
* Geographical market? Court holds that market is national, relying mostly on supply-side elasticity.
* How to define market in general? If firms increase prices, will consumers switch to another firm? Will other firms serve this area?

United States v. United Shoe Machinery Corp.




[110 F. Supp. 295] 1953 District of Massachusetts (cb659)

* Three different tests for monopolization: when a monopolist 'does business', it monpolizes, with possible defenses; unreasonable restraints of trade as under § 1 practiced to maintain monopoly under § 2; and having power to exclude competition and exercising that power.
* United only leased but did not sell its machines.
* Full capacity clause: manufacturers had to use United machines when they had work for them.
* Return clause: had to pay fee to return machine.

Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp.




[472 U.S. 585] 1985 United States Supreme Court (cb690)

* Separate mountains had previously had shared lift tickets; Aspen Skiing purchased three mountains and then stopped multi-mountain pass.
* Court finds excluding Highlands from pass to be monopolistic conduct. Not sufficient in and of itself.


Tuesday, July 16, 2002 (Class 15) =


Problem 6.6 ==

(cb703)

* Since there was no pre-existing agreement, Aspen might not apply.
* Court held that Molar and Bicuspid were not 'competitors' and stopped analysis there.
* Essential facilities doctrine: duty to provide access to limited resources, e.g., phone lines, cable lines, etc..

United States v. Microsoft Corporation




[253 F.3d 34] 2001 District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals

* Monopoly power
** Microsoft's argument: need direct evidence, claims court has incorrectly ruled out Apple and middleware as part of market. Because it's a dynamic market, can't just look at market share.
** How can middleware be potential competitor that Microsoft squashed and at the same time not part of the market? Because middleware is nascent product, not yet option for consumers to turn to.
* Exclusionary conduct
** Plaintiff needs to show anticompetitive effect; defendant then needs to give procompetitive justification; then plaintiff has burden of showing procompetitive justification is pretextual or that anticompetitive effect outweighs procompetitive benefits (sounds like rule of reason).
** MS prevented hardware manufacturers from changing boot-up sequence or having different browser, didn't allow IE to be removed, commingled code
** Exclusive dealing arrangements with ISP and ISV
** Java 'pollution'
* DC circuit overturned remedy, ordered conduct restrictions until divestiture was complete.

Attempted Monopolization




* Elements (Spectrum Sports)
** Exclusionary conduct
** Dangerous probability of achieving monopoly power
** Specific intent to monopolize
* Microsoft case: attempted monopolization of browser market
* Attempted price-fixing: does offer to fix prices constitute crime?

Predatory Pricing




* Pricing below cost, and recoupment after competitors have been forced from market
* Court tends to be hostile to predatory pricing claims

Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.




[509 U.S. 209] 1993 United States Supreme Court (cb735)

* No dispute that Brown & Williamson cut prices below cost and had specific intent to carry out predatory pricing scheme.
* Issue: Liggett failed to show that recoupment was likely.

* Read through General Dynamics for Thursday.



Thursday, July 18, 2002 (Class 16) =


Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. ==

[509 U.S. 209] 1993 United States Supreme Court (cb735)

* Court finds there is not sufficient evidence that Brown & Williamson will be able to recoup losses from alleged predatory pricing in generic cigarette market.
* Also: output of generic cigarettes was higher at end of predation than beforehand.

* What is 'below cost pricing'?
** Fixed vs. variable costs
** Areda-Turner test:
** Pricing below average variable cost is conclusively predatory, between average variable cost and average total cost is presumptively okay
** All circuits except 9th hold above total cost pricing to be legal
** Massachusetts has fair pricing law, prohibiting below-cost pricing by anyone, not just monopolist.
** Problem with Areda-Turner test: at high end of output, might price below marginal cost but well above average variable cost, since marginal costs get very high at high end of output.

Mergers




* Only way to really deal with 'structural' issues
* Three types of measures:
** Horizontal
** Vertical
** Conglomerates (elimination of potential competition)
* Horizontal mergers:
** Have potential to create market power, permit firms to raise prices, similar to price-fixing
* Section 7 was amended to make clear that standard of illegality for mergers is much lower than standard for illegality under § 1 or § 2

Brown Shoe Co. v. United States




[370 U.S. 294] 1962 United States Supreme Court (cb819)

* Market: national on wholesale level (local at retail level)
* Challenge to merger between Brown Shoe and Kinney
* No issue of concentration at manufacturing level
* Dodge City, Kansas: 57% in combined market for women's shoes
* Should market be defined as women's shoes? Low cross-elasticity of demand, but high elasticity of supply
* Question of geographic market, as well--need to look at where people will travel if prices increase
* Court found prices would likely decrease as a result of efficiencies from being part of national chain



Tuesday, July 23, 2002 (Class 17) =


Brown Shoe Co. v. United States ==

[370 U.S. 294 (1962)] 1962 United States Supreme Court (cb819)

United States v. Philadelphia National Bank




[374 U.S. 321] 1963 United States Supreme Court (cb827)

* Relevant market: commercial banking services, in four county Philadelphia metropolitan area
* Resulting bank would be largest in area--34%-36% depending on how it is measured.
* Argument: banks need to merge to compete with large New York banks. But Court will not allow anticompetitive effects in one market to be justified by procompetitive effects in another market.
* As Clayton act is interpretated, cannot argue for 'local presence' as justification for merger (e.g., Fleet Bank/Bank? Boston merger).

United States v. General Dynamics Corp.




[415 U.S. 486] 1974 United States Supreme Court (cb837)

* Alleged relevant market: production and sale of coal, in Illinois or Eastern Interior Coal Province Sales Area.
* Combined market share of merging parties in Illinois 21.8% in 1967, 10.9% in region
* Market concentrated, sufficient under Philadelphia National Bank standard
* prima facie case rebutted by lack of coal reserves, market share statistics didn't give accurate picture of market going into the future
* Merger occurred in 1959, but lawsuit wasn't brought until 1967
* Later, act required notice to government about merger--after that, mergers rarely attacked after they take place
* Last year, Congress changed thresholds for filing, such that smaller transactions are exempt from notice requirement, thus some mergers being examined after-the-fact attack
* No real 'statute of limitations' on mergers, as bad effects continue forward in time

Horizontal Merger Guidelines




* Herfendal-Hirschman Index: sum of squares of market shares, measures market share
* 2 * merging firmers = change in HHI
* 100% market share = HHI 10000 (100^2)
* 100 firms, each with 1% = HHI 100 (100*1^2)
* 10 firms, each with 10% = HHI 1000
* See guidelines cb1080 for general standards on HHI


Tuesday, July 30, 2002 (Class 19) =


United States v. Waste Management, Inc. ==

[743 F.2d 976] 1984 2d Circuit Court of Appeals (cb871)

* Committed entrant: requires some sort of "sunk" investment--money that you won't get back if operation does not exceed.
* Entry into waste hauling business--probably not sunk costs, since you could rent a truck, e.g..
* Assuming prices increase as a result of merger, why would firms enter market if prices will eventually return to pre-merger prices? Because price spike give new firms opportunity to gain market share without lowering prices.

Federal Trade Commission v. H.J. Heinz Co.




[F.3d] 2001 DC Circuit Court of Appeals (sp85)

* Relevant market: baby food. Market leader is Gerber. Heinz acquiring Beech Nut.
* Premerger 5000, change as result of merger is over 500.
* Little innovation or change in industry.
* FTC staff had recomended that merger be permitted, but overruled by commission. District Court would have allowed merger, but overruled by DC Circuit.
* Potential argument: Two small competitors merging to compete better against large dominant firm.
* Heinz argues that numbers not reflective of competition: Beech Nut competes more directly with Gerber but Heinz is discount brand which doesn't compete with Gerber.
* Thus, Beech Nut and Heinz don't compete directly at retail level, thus merger should be permissible.
* DC Circuit didn't accept argument, however, holding that Beech Nut and Heinz are competitors at supermarket level.
* Heinz and Beech Nut needed to pay supermarkets to be second brand on shelf after Gerber.
* Claimed efficiencies/cost-savings: claimed cost of production will be 43% less after merger.
* Court doesn't recognize 43% figure; holds that total manufacturing cost savings will only be 22%.
* Issue is not whether Beech Nut's costs would be lower, but whether Heinz's costs would be lower, because it would be the surviving company.
* Efficiencies need to be merger specific--only be achieved through this merger.
* Merger-specific efficiency claim: Beech-Nut had better recipes. But Heinz could invest to get better recipes, merger is not only way to get efficiency.
* Collusive potential when there are only two firms is high, does not outweigh efficiencies--merger to monopoly or near-monopoly is almost never justified by efficiencies.

Conglomerate Mergers




* Issue: whether there is a loss of potential competition

United States v. Continental Can Co.




[378 U.S. 441] 1964 United States Supreme Court (cb883)

* Continental Can is acquiring Hazel-Atlas: Continental Can makes "cans" and Hazel-Atlas makes "glass containers."
* Continental Can is second-largest producer of metal containers, with 33% market share; Hazel-Atlas is 3rd largest glass container producer with 9% of market.
* Much harder to stop merger between potential competitors rather than actual competitors. If market is broadened, challenge to merger is strengthened as firms become horizontal competitors.
* Anticompetitive problem: can-maker might not invest in improving glass container technology since Continental would want to protect its can market.

United States v. El Paso Nat. Gas Co.




[376 U.S. 651] 1964 United States Supreme Court (cb889)

* El Paso seeks to acquire Pacific Northwest; Pacific had not sold any natural gas in Southern California, so at first blush looks like potential competitors rather than actual competitors.
* In the past, however, El Paso has bid for projects in Southern California. Could look at Pacific's capacity to serve Southern California market, as well as other firms that had capacity, in order to determine market.
* More natural to examine as horizontal merger.

FTC v. Procter & Gamble Co.




[386 U.S. 568] 1967 United States Supreme Court (cb891)

* True 'conglomerate merger' case--no question of whether parties are in same market, all lost competition is potential competition.
* Procter & Gamble is acquiring Clorox; relevant market is bleach.
* Procter & Gamble doesn't currently sell any bleach, but does sell complementary household products.
* P&G's acquisition could 'entrench' Clorox's position in the bleach market and block further entry into bleach market.
* P&G could enter bleach market if it didn't acquire Clorox, thus could create a lot of competition in market.
* P&G's existence at the 'edge of the market' exercised significant price controls on Clorox, for fear that P&G would enter market.
* If P&G could prove economies of scale for advertising in merged entity, and this would make it more difficult for new firms to enter market: these efficiencies were not seen as defense to merger but rather as reason for condemning the merger.
* Advertising efficiencies would probably not be cognizable today, since they are not 'merger-specific'.



Thursday, August 1, 2002 (Class 20) =


General Electric/Honeywell? Merger ==

* Standard in European Community: create or strengthen a dominant position (vs. lessen competition under Clayton Act).
* If 'dominant position' means 'monopoly' than EC standard would be much more lax than Clayton Act standard, but in practice 'dominant position' can be as little as 30%.
* Conglomerate merger: non-competing products (GE was willing to divest horizontal overlap).
* Issue was not potential competition.
* GE was dominant in jet engines, Honeywell in avionics/non-avionics.
* Merger of complementary products, not competing products.
* GECAS is largest purchaser of airplanes, only purchases jets with GE engines.
* Suggestions that merger could go through if GE would spin off GECAS, but GE held that to be a 'deal breaker'.
* Exclusive dealing with GE Capital: airframe manufacturers that received GE capital funding had exclusive dealing arrangements with GE (not threshold issue, though).
* Bundling: company would bundle GE engines with Honeywell avionic systems, sell them at a discount as a package deal. Under US analysis, this would be competitive efficiency, but under EC analysis 'tends to create or strengthen a dominant position'.

Vertical Mergers ==


United States v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. ==

[353 U.S. 586] 1957 United States Supreme Court (cb786)

* du Pont acquired 23% of stock of GM in 1917, challenged in 1957.
* Market foreclosure for automotive fabrics and finishes would be equally to GM's market share if GM got all of its finishes from du Pont. 38-68% of requirements were actually purchased from du Pont, however.
* Dissent: market was finishes and fabric, not just for automobiles. Thus market foreclosure would be much smaller.

Brown Shoe Co. v. United States




[370 U.S. 294] 1962 United States Supreme Court (cb790)

* Horizontal aspect: competition in retail for shoe stores
* Vertical geographic market: national market


Tuesday, August 6, 2002 (Class 20) =


Time Warner/Turner? ==

* Time-Warner: largest cable programmer (HBO, Cinemax), 2nd largest MVPD market--distribution (17%)
* Turner/TCI: 3rd largest programmer (CNN, TNT, WTBS), largest MVPD--27% (TCI)
* Time-Warner owned 20% of Turner
* Turner owned 27% of TCI
* Time-Warner-Turner would have 40% of programming market, and 41% of subscribers
* Merger has horizontal and vertical aspects
* Horizontal: concentration in programming market
* Tying arrangement: could force MVPDs to take unwanted stations along with CNN, HBO, foreclosing station slots to other programmers.

Standing ==


Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois ==

[431 U.S. 720] 1977 United States Supreme Court (cb96)

* Case holding indirect purchasers cannot sue for treble damages, even if they were 'harmed' by antitrust violation.

Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.




[429 U.S. 477] 1977 United States Supreme Court (cb115)

* Certain injuries do not constitute antitrust injury; not all injuries are cognizable



Thursday, August 8, 2002 (Class 21)




* Radio station problem
* Actual potential competition: would enter market but for the merger. Not applicable here.
* Perceived potential competition: other players keep prices low because of fear of competition; perceived potential competition eliminated by merger.
* Horizontal guidelines: firm that's not currently in market but will be within a year in response to small price increase--uncommitted entrants: considered part of the market.
* If WAMC doesn't need to put any additional 'sunk costs' to enter market, they are essentially in the market.
* Market definition?
** Advertising on radio stations
** Advertising on radio and newspapers
** Advertising on television stations
* Consider competitive effects--coordinated or unilateral
** Evidence that market is somewhat competitive now--while newspapers charge local advertisers more, radio stations do not
* Barriers to entry
** Only one license available--thus no easy entry
* Efficiencies
* Philadelphia National Bank presumption
* Entry: big factor cutting against merger
* Lack of efficiencies against merger
* Absence of coordinated action or unilateral effects would favor merger




Antitrust

Prof. Rick Brunell

Thursday, May 30, 2002 (Class 1)

Price-Fixing

United States v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass'n

[166 U.S. 290] 1897 United States Supreme Court (cb32)

Chicago Board of Trade v. United States

[246 U.S. 231] 1918 United States Supreme Court (cb189)

United States v. Trenton Potteries Co.

[273 U.S. 392] 1927 United States Supreme Court (cb193)

Appalachian Coals, Inc. v. United States

[288 U.S. 344] 1933 United States Supreme Court (cb197)

United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.

[310 U.S. 150] 1940 United States Supreme Court (cb201)


Tuesday, June 4, 2002 (Class 2)

United States v. Container Corp. of America

[393 U.S. 333] 1969 United States Supreme Court (cb224)

United States v. United States Gypsum Co.

[438 U.S. 422] 1978 United States Supreme Court (cb230)

Meaning and Scope of Rule of Reason

National Society of Professional Engineers v. United States

[435 U.S. 679] 1978 United States Supreme Court (cb236)

Broadcast Music, Inc. v. Columbia Broadcasting System

[441 U.S. 1] 1979 United States Supreme Court (cb242)


Thursday, June 6, 2002 (Class 3) (Assignment 3)

Catalano, Inc. v. Target Sales, Inc.

[446 U.S. 643] 1980 United States Supreme Court (cb253)

Problem 4.2: Visa and Mastercard

Problem 4.3: Financial Aid Packages

Arizona v. Maricopa County Medical Society

[457 U.S. 332] 1982 United States Supreme Court (cb256)

National Collegiate Athletic Ass'n v. Board of Regents

[468 U.S. 85] 1984 United States Supreme Court (cb265)


Friday, June 7, 2002 (Class 4) (Make-Up Class)

California Dental Association v. Federal Trade Commission

[526 U.S. 756] 1999 United States Supreme Court (sp15)

Conspiracy Doctrine

Interstate Circuit v. United States

[306 U.S. 208] 1939 United States Supreme Court (cb280)

Theatre Enterprises, Inc. v. Paramount Film Distributing Corp.

[346 U.S. 537] 1954 United States Supreme Court (cb285)


Wednesday, June 11, 2002 (Class 5)

E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. FTC

[729 F.2d 128] 1984 2d Circuit Court of Appeals (cb304)

Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.

[467 U.S. 752] 1984 United States Supreme Court (cb311)

Matsushita Electronic Industrial Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.

[475 U.S. 574] 1986 United States Supreme Court (cb325)

Market Allocation Agreements

Thursday, June 13, 2002 (Class 6)

United States v. Sealy

[388 U.S. 350] 1967 United States Supreme Court (cb351)

United States v. Topco Associates

[405 U.S. 596] 1972 United States Supreme Court (cb354)

Polk Bros. v. Forest City Enterprises

[776 F.2d 185] 1985 7th Circuit Court of Appeals (cb362)

Group Boycotts

Northwest Wholesale Stationers, Inc. v. Pacific Stationery & Printing Co.

[472 U.S. 284] 1985 United States Supreme Court (cb388)


Tuesday, June 18, 2002 (Class 7)

Toys 'r' Us

FTC V. Indiana Federation of Dentists

[476 U.S. 447] 1986 United States Supreme Court (cb395)

Associated Press v. United States

[326 U.S. 1] 1945 United States Supreme Court (cb404)

Vertical Agreements


Thursday, June 20, 2002 (Class 8)

Resale Price Maintenance

Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John D. Park & Sons, Co.

[220 U.S. 373] 1911 United States Supreme Court (cb421)

State Oil Company v. Khan

[118 S. Ct. 275] 1997 United States Supreme Court (cb441)

Non-Price Vertical Restraints

Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania, Inc.

[433 U.S. 36] 1977 United States Supreme Court (cb476)


Tuesday, June 25, 2002 (Class 9)

United States v. Colgate & Co.

[250 U.S. 300] 1919 United States Supreme Court (cb437)

Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Service Corp.

[465 U.S. 752] 1984 United States Supreme Court (cb451)

Business Electronics v. Sharp Electronics

[485 U.S. 717] 1988 United States Supreme Court (cb458)

Compact Disc Case

Interbrand Vertical Restraints


Thursday, June 27, 2002 (Class 10)

Tampa Electric Co. v. Nashville Coal Co.

[365 U.S. 320] 1961 United States Supreme Court (cb507)

Tying Arrangements

Times-Picayune Publishing Co. v. United States

[345 U.S. 594] 1953 United States Supreme Court (cb520)

Northern Pacific Railway v. United States

[356 U.S. 1] 1958 United States Supreme Court (cb524)

Jefferson Parish Hospital District No. 2 v. Hyde

[466 U.S. 2] 1984 United States Supreme Court (cb536)


Tuesday, July 2, 2002 (Class 11)

Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Services, Inc.

[504 U.S. 451] 1992 United States Supreme Court (cb553)

Microsoft Case


Tuesday, July 9, 2002 (Class 12)

Monopoly

United States v. Alumnium Co. of America

[148 F.2d 416] 1945 2d Circuit Court of Appeals (cb611)


Thursday, July 11, 2002 (Class 13)

Problem 6.1

(cb636)

United States v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.

[351 U.S. 377] 1956 United States Supreme Court (cb636)

Telex Corp. v. IBM Corp.

[510 F.2d 894] 1975 2d Circuit Court of Appeals (cb645)

Friday, July 12, 2002 (Class 14)

United States v. Grinnell Corp.

[384 U.S. 563] 1966 United States Supreme Court (cb653)

United States v. United Shoe Machinery Corp.

[110 F. Supp. 295] 1953 District of Massachusetts (cb659)

Aspen Skiing Co. v. Aspen Highlands Skiing Corp.

[472 U.S. 585] 1985 United States Supreme Court (cb690)


Tuesday, July 16, 2002 (Class 15)

Problem 6.6

(cb703)

United States v. Microsoft Corporation

[253 F.3d 34] 2001 District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals

Attempted Monopolization

Predatory Pricing

Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.

[509 U.S. 209] 1993 United States Supreme Court (cb735)


Thursday, July 18, 2002 (Class 16)

Brooke Group Ltd. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.

[509 U.S. 209] 1993 United States Supreme Court (cb735)

Mergers

Brown Shoe Co. v. United States

[370 U.S. 294] 1962 United States Supreme Court (cb819)


Tuesday, July 23, 2002 (Class 17)

Brown Shoe Co. v. United States

[370 U.S. 294 (1962)] 1962 United States Supreme Court (cb819)

United States v. Philadelphia National Bank

[374 U.S. 321] 1963 United States Supreme Court (cb827)

United States v. General Dynamics Corp.

[415 U.S. 486] 1974 United States Supreme Court (cb837)

Horizontal Merger Guidelines


Tuesday, July 30, 2002 (Class 19)

United States v. Waste Management, Inc.

[743 F.2d 976] 1984 2d Circuit Court of Appeals (cb871)

Federal Trade Commission v. H.J. Heinz Co.

[F.3d] 2001 DC Circuit Court of Appeals (sp85)

Conglomerate Mergers

United States v. Continental Can Co.

[378 U.S. 441] 1964 United States Supreme Court (cb883)

United States v. El Paso Nat. Gas Co.

[376 U.S. 651] 1964 United States Supreme Court (cb889)

FTC v. Procter & Gamble Co.

[386 U.S. 568] 1967 United States Supreme Court (cb891)


Thursday, August 1, 2002 (Class 20)

General Electric/Honeywell? Merger

Vertical Mergers

United States v. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.

[353 U.S. 586] 1957 United States Supreme Court (cb786)

Brown Shoe Co. v. United States

[370 U.S. 294] 1962 United States Supreme Court (cb790)


Tuesday, August 6, 2002 (Class 20)

Time Warner/Turner?

Standing

Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois

[431 U.S. 720] 1977 United States Supreme Court (cb96)

Brunswick Corp. v. Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, Inc.

[429 U.S. 477] 1977 United States Supreme Court (cb115)


Thursday, August 8, 2002 (Class 21)



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