Antitrust -- 2015



Motorola Mobility LLC v. AU Optronics Corp.   (U.S. Supreme Court)

Extraterritorial reach of U.S. antitrust law

This case involves a private antitrust suit against foreign manufacturers of LCD display screens for mobile phones. The Seventh Circuit rejected a claim by Motorola Mobility for against foreign manufacturers alleged to have fixed the prices of the screens before selling them to Motorola through its foreign subsidiaries, who then included the components in the phones destined for the U.S. market. The court thought that because the subsidiaries were incorporated abroad and the work was done abroad, there was an insufficient connection to U.S. commerce under the provisions of the Foreign Trade Antitrust Improvement Act of 1982.

The NAM filed an amicus brief supporting an appeal of this decision to the Supreme Court. Our brief simply calls for clarification from the Court on the extent to which U.S. antitrust law allows a right of action against price fixing in this kind of situation, which for many reasons is not an uncommon way for U.S. manufacturers to structure their manufacturing operations when buying from foreign suppliers. A similar case in the Ninth Circuit, involving criminal charges for the same conspiracy, resulted in that court allowing U.S. jurisdiction because of the significant effects on U.S. commerce.

On June 15, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court denied cert in this case.

 


Class Actions -- 2014



Mississippi v. AU Optronics Corp.   (U.S. Supreme Court)

Removal jurisdiction under CAFA

The Attorney General of Mississippi brought a parens patriae action in state court on behalf of numerous citizens of the state against 22 out-of-state companies for alleged price-fixing in the LCD screen industry. The appeals court ruled that this suit was in effect a mass action, like a class action, that is removable under the provisions of the federal Class Action Fairness Act (CAFA), and that the case should be heard in federal court. CAFA was enacted to allow large cases involving numerous plaintiffs against out-of-state defendants to be transferred, or removed, to a federal court. Federal courts are often viewed as a more neutral judicial forum than some state courts.

The NAM joined with the Access to Courts Initiative, Inc. in an amicus brief urging the Court to recognize that the Constitution established federal courts in part to hear cases between one state and citizens of another (including companies located in other states). There should be no presumption against transferring a mass action case out of state court, and in fact, there should be a presumption in favor of removal under the constitutional structure. An unduly constrained view of federal jurisdiction has helped fuel the litigation explosion of the last fifty years, contributing to the imposition of billions of dollars of costs on American consumers and the loss of hundreds of thousands of American jobs.

The Supreme Court ruled unanimously 1/14/14 that a case like this cannot be removed to federal court because Mississippi was the only plaintiff and the case was therefore not a mass action under CAFA. CAFA allows removal of cases with 100 or more persons, but a state filing suit in a representative capacity is only one plaintiff, even through it represents hundreds of unidentified persons with an interest in the outcome. The Court refused to look behind the pleadings by the state to find out if it was gaming the system, because Congress did not intend for such an inquiry in mass action cases.


Related Documents:
NAM amicus brief  (September 10, 2013)