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DEREGULATION AND THE DEMISE OF SHAM LITIGATION. EVIDENCE FROM APPELLATE DECISIONS 1972-2006 By Christopher C. Klein. Sham Litigation. The use of regulatory agencies or the courts to harass competitors in order to achieve an anticompetitive goal. Such goals may include
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DEREGULATION AND THE DEMISE OF SHAM LITIGATION EVIDENCE FROM APPELLATE DECISIONS 1972-2006 By Christopher C. Klein
Sham Litigation • The use of regulatory agencies or the courts to harass competitors in order to achieve an anticompetitive goal. • Such goals may include • Prevent or delay entry to a market • Prevent or delay expansion by a competitor • Cause a rival to lose sales or exit • Raise rivals’ cost of doing business
Sham Litigation and the Sherman Act • The victims of sham litigation may sue the perpetrator for treble damages under the Sherman Antitrust Act, if the alleged sham act • Enforced a conspiracy to fix prices or otherwise lessen competition • Was an attempt to monopolize a market
Supreme Court 1961 • In Eastern Railroad Presidents Conference v. Noerr (1961): • Attempts to influence government are immune to challenge under the Sherman Act, unless the attempts are a “mere sham” aimed at disrupting the business relationships of a competitor.
Supreme Court 1972 • In California Motor Transport Co. v. Trucking Unlimited (1972): • Litigants guilty of sham litigation are not shielded from antitrust liability • A pattern of claims brought “with or without” probable cause may constitute sham litigation
Supreme Court 1993 • In Professional Real Estate Investors v. Columbia Pictures Indus. (1993): • For sham litigation to face antitrust liability it “...must constitute the pursuit of claims so baseless that no reasonable litigant could realistically expect to secure favorable relief.” • Applies only to single acts, not patterns
Initial Research Question • Did the Supreme Court’s 1993 decision in PREI alter the frequency or characteristics of antitrust suits on claims of sham litigation?
CASE DATA: 1972-2006 • Characteristics of all antitrust suits • on claims of sham litigation • that produced decisions in federal Circuit Courts of Appeal • before and after 1993 • Antitrust suits were identified by searching LEXIS for citations to the Supreme Court’s decisions in California Motor Transport and Prof. Real Estate Investors
Trends • The number of cases brought per year generally declined • There is no statistically significant change in frequency around 1993 • A statistically significant break in the trend occurs in the mid-1980s • Why?
Initial Trend Analysis • Basic Model • Nt = B1 + B2Trend + B3Trendsq + B4Dy + B5(Dy*Trend) + B6(Dy*Trendsq) + ut • Dy = 1 starting year y • Spline Regression • Nt = B1 + B2Trend + B3Trendsq + B4Ty + B5Tysq + et • Ty is a trend starting in year y
Trend Analysis 2 • Add • measures of GDP or growth rate • measure of opportunity cost • Nt = B1 + B2Trend + B3Trendsq + B4Dy + B5(Dy*Trend) + B6(Dy*Trendsq) + B7GDPt + B8Primet + ut
Nonlinear Trend, 1986 Break, 3-year Averages: GDP Growth, Prime Rate
Linear Trend,1986 Break, 3-year Averages: GDP Growth, Prime Rate
Decline of Regulation in 1980s • Staggers Act (1982) removes federal price regulation of railroads and motor carriers • Most states deregulate motor carriers by 1990 • 1983 AT&T divestiture reduced incentive to use local monopoly to block entry in long distance or equipment manufacturing • PURPA (1978) and FERC Order 888 (1986) reform Electric Industry
Conclusion • Declining frequency of antitrust suits on sham litigation claims is more likely the result of regulatory reform than of changes in the case law. • “Deregulation” removed many low cost opportunities to deter entry or harass competitors. • Patents are major source of recent suits.