Food & Agriculture Quarterly January 2019 | Page 4

Egg producers prevail in a rare jury trial involving Sherman Act Claims ALLEN CARTER A group of egg producers prevailed at trial against a class of direct purchasers that alleged the nation’s largest egg producers violated the federal antitrust laws by collectively trying to reduce the supply of eggs in the country. A class of direct purchasers of shell eggs had filed its original complaint in 2008 against 17 defendants: 14 egg producers and three agricultural cooperatives. The class had been certified to represent all individuals and entities that purchased shell eggs produced from caged birds in the United States directly from the defendants during the class period from Sept. 24, 2004, to Dec. 31, 2008. The class claimed damages in excess of $1 billion, an amount that was to be trebled if the class prevailed. During the course of nearly 10 years of litigation, most of the original defendants reached settlement agreements with the class, leaving only three egg producers to defend their conduct at trial. The case was tried before a jury in May and June 2018 over the course of 27 trial days in the United States District Court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The class argued the defendants were part of a price-fixing scheme consisting of three types of supply control activities; each of which they alleged were conducted by egg producers through the leading egg industry agricultural cooperative, the United Egg Producers (UEP), and an agricultural PAGE 4 cooperative engaged in egg exports, the United States Egg Marketers (USEM). Most prominently, the class argued that the egg industry’s standard- bearing animal welfare program, the UEP Certified Program, was actually a sham designed to control and limit the egg supply. Second, the class argued that USEM’s egg export activity was designed to reduce domestic egg supply. Third, the class argued that UEP’s cyclical management recommendations were designed to reduce egg supply during seasonal periods when the industry traditionally suffered low demand and collapsing prices. The class argued that three activities were combined to reduce domestic egg supply, and thereby, raise domestic shell egg prices. The court had previously determined that UEP’s Certified program would be adjudged under the rule of reason. The “rule of reason” required the jury to determine whether there was any concerted effort on the part of the defendants, and if so, the jury had to determine whether the benefits to competition from that concerted activity outweighed the harm to competition. Pre-trial, the plaintiffs elected to have all of the alleged unlawful conduct judged under that same standard. Additionally, plaintiffs had to prove that the class was injured by the defendants’ actions. The court had ruled that the trial would be bifurcated, trying liability issues first, and