Friday, February 5, 2016

Apple Again Seeks to End Antitrust Class Action Lawsuit

Apple class action lawsuitOn Feb. 2, Apple Inc. asked the court for summary judgment of the class action lawsuit alleging that Apple violated antitrust laws with its original agreement to exclusively allow iPhones only on AT&T’s cellular network.

The Apple antitrust class action complaint, originally filed in 2012, alleges that Apple entered into a contract allowing AT&T to monopolize the market of network service for iPhone cell phones.

Apple enforced its exclusive agreement by installing software that “locked” iPhones, preventing consumers from switching cell phone carriers, the plaintiffs allege. According to the Apple class action lawsuit, this effectively gave AT&T a monopoly over “aftermarket iPhone voice and data services,” meaning that consumers could not use any other cell carriers other than AT&T for their iPhones while the agreement was in place.

Apple filed a motion to dismiss last September, arguing that the plaintiffs’ allegation that AT&T had a monopoly on “aftermarket” services was incorrect. AT&T does not have a monopoly because it competes with other cell carriers, Apple claimed. In addition, Apple asserted that consumers knew they had to use the AT&T network before they purchased the iPhone. Apple’s first motion to dismiss was denied by the court.

In its most recent filing, Apple again argues that AT&T does not have a monopoly in an “aftermarket” for “voice and data services for the iPhone.” Apple renewed its claim that AT&T faces strong competition from other cell carriers at all times, and that consumers almost always signed up for AT&T service at the same time they purchased an iPhone.

“The reality is that one of four major cellular service providers entered into a three-and-a-half-year exclusive distribution agreement with one of many handset manufacturers” Apple states in its motion, and therefore there “are no viable legal grounds for calling that a conspiracy to monopolize.”

In addition, Apple seeks to end the antitrust class action lawsuit by arguing that the law is only concerned when there is a change in aftermarket prices forced on consumers who are stuck with one company because of a monopoly. Here, Apple claims, “there is no evidence that AT&T ever charged more for iPhone service than it charged for service on other competitive handsets.” In fact, Apple contends that its agreement with AT&T “guaranteed market rates, which defeats the claim of a separate aftermarket.”

Finally, Apple argues that plaintiffs Zach Ward and Thomas Buchar each purchased an iPhone in 2009, two years after the original iPhone was sold exclusively through AT&T, so they knew that the iPhone was exclusive to the AT&T cell network. Apple also claims that they both entered into service contracts with AT&T at the same time they bought their iPhones, so their argument about an “aftermarket” should fail.

Plaintiffs Zach Ward and Thomas Buchar are represented by Francis M. Gregorek, Rachele R. Rickert, Mark C. Rifkin, Alexander H. Schmidt, and Michael Liskow of Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz LLP.

The Apple Antitrust Class Action Lawsuit is Zack Ward, et al., v. Apple Inc., Case No. 4:12-cv-05404, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, Oakland Division.

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