97-7261. Detroit Auto Dealers Association, Inc.; Analysis To Aid Public Comment  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 55 (Friday, March 21, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 13617-13619]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-7261]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    [File No. D-9189]
    
    
    Detroit Auto Dealers Association, Inc.; Analysis To Aid Public 
    Comment
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Proposed consent agreement.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: In settlement of alleged violations of federal law prohibiting 
    unfair or deceptive acts or practices and unfair methods of 
    competition, this consent agreement, accepted subject to final 
    Commission approval, would require, among other things, the eleven 
    remaining dealerships in the FTC's case against the Detroit Automobile 
    Dealers Association (DADA) to be bound by the terms and provisions of 
    an existing 1995 Commission order, with certain modifications. The 
    original complaint alleged that DADA and a large number of its member 
    automobile dealers violated federal antitrust laws when they illegally 
    conspired to limit competition in the sale of new cars in the Detroit 
    area by closing dealerships on Saturdays and most week nights.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before May 20, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to: FTC/Office of the Secretary, 
    Room 159, 6th St. and Pa. Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William J. Baer, Federal Trade 
    Commission, H-374, 6th St. and Pa. Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. 
    (202) 326-2932.
    Mark D. Whitener, Federal Trade Commission, H-374, 6th St. and Pa. 
    Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. (202) 326-2845.
    Ernest A. Nagata, Federal Trade Commission, H-394, 6th St. and Pa. 
    Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20580. (202) 326-2714.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to Section 6(f) of the Federal 
    Trade Commission Act, 38 Stat. 721, 15 U.S.C. 46, and Section 2.34 of 
    the Commission's Rules of Practice (16 CFR 2.34), notice is hereby 
    given that the above-captioned consent agreement containing a consent 
    order to cease and desist, having been filed with and accepted, subject 
    to final approval, by the Commission, has been placed on the public 
    record for a period of sixty (60) days. The following Analysis to Aid 
    Public Comment describes the terms of the consent agreement, and the 
    allegations in the accompanying complaint. An electronic copy of the 
    full text of the consent agreement package can be obtained from the 
    Commission Actions section of the FTC Home Page (for March 14, 1997), 
    on the World Wide Web, at ``http://www.ftc.gov/os/actions/htm.'' A 
    paper copy can be obtained from the FTC Public Reference Room, Room H-
    130, Sixth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 
    20580, either in person or by calling (202) 326-3627. Public comment is 
    invited. Such comments or views will be considered by the Commission 
    and will be available for inspection and copying at its principal 
    office in accordance with Section 4.9(b)(6)(ii) of the Commission's 
    Rules of Practice (16 CFR 4.9(b)(6)(ii).
    
    Analysis of Proposed Consent Order To Aid Public Comment
    
        The Federal Trade Commission (``Commission'') has accepted, subject 
    to final approval, an agreement to a proposed consent order from eleven 
    automobile dealerships and nine owners or managers of dealerships in 
    the Detroit, Michigan Area. The parties to the agreement (hereinafter 
    collectively referred to as ``the dealers'') are listed at the end of 
    this document. The proposed order requires the dealers to cease and 
    desist from entering into or carrying out any agreement among 
    themselves or with other dealers to fix the hours of operation of 
    automobile dealerships in the Detroit area.
        The proposed consent order will resolve charges against the final 
    group of respondents named in an administrative compliant issued by the 
    Commission in December, 1984, in Detroit Auto Dealers Ass'n, Inc., Dkt. 
    No. 9089. Similar charges against other respondents were resolved 
    through consent orders issued in 1994 after a federal appellate court 
    substantially affirmed the Commission's finding that respondents 
    violated Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act.
        The consent order now proposed will modify a previous order that 
    was entered against the present dealers in 1989 and subsequently 
    modified in 1995. Upon further review, the Commission has determined 
    that the previous order should be further modified in light of changes 
    in the market since the entry of the 1994 consent orders. The 1994 
    orders required the respondent dealers to maintain extended operating 
    hours for a one year period to restore competition that was lost as a 
    result of the dealers' agreement to keep their stores closed on 
    Saturdays and on several week nights. Recent evidence indicates that 
    the market has changed in response to the previous orders, making it 
    unnecessary to continue the same mandatory hours requirement in the 
    order against the present dealers. The proposed consent order therefore 
    suspends the remainder of that requirement.
        The proposed consent order has been placed on the public record for 
    60 days for reception of comments by interested parties. Comments 
    received during this period will become part of the public record. 
    After 60 days, the Commission will again review the agreement and the 
    comments received and will decide whether it should withdraw from the 
    agreement or make final the agreement's proposed order.
    
    [[Page 13618]]
    
    Background
    
        Count I of the administrative complaint charged that the 
    respondents agreed among themselves and with others to limit 
    competition in the sale of new motor vehicles in the Detroit, Michigan 
    area in violation of Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, by 
    adopting and adhering to a schedule limiting hours of operation for the 
    sale or lease of motor vehicles in the Detroit area. The alleged 
    agreement limited weekday evening hours to Mondays and Thursdays and 
    eliminated Saturday hours altogether, except for occasional special 
    sales.\1\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ Count II of the complaint, charging certain dealers with 
    agreements to restrain advertising, was settled in 1986.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The dealers defended their agreement in part on grounds that they 
    had acted in response to employee demands for shorter hours and, 
    therefore, that the agreement was exempt from the antitrust laws by 
    reason of the nonstatutory labor exemption. In February, 1989, the 
    Commission held that the dealers' agreement restrained competition, and 
    that the dealers were not entitled to the nonstatutory labor exemption 
    because their uniform hours restrictions were not the result of any 
    collective bargaining activity with employees; on the contrary, the 
    dealers had agreed among themselves in order to avoid collective 
    bargaining. Detroit Auto Dealers Ass'n, Inc. 111 F.T.C. 417 (1989). The 
    Commission's Final Order, among other provisions, prohibited the 
    dealers from conspiring in any way to fix hours of operation. As a 
    corrective measure the Final Order also required the dealers to remain 
    open a minimum of 64 hours a week for one year. The Commission found 
    that ``a cease and desist order alone would be inadequate to remedy the 
    respondents' violations of Section 5.'' Because of the history of 
    violent enforcement of the hours restrictions, the Commission found 
    that ``[d]ealers individually will decide to remain closed for fear of 
    reprisals if they try to extend hours. Only if many dealers are open at 
    the same time, making enforcement of the restriction difficult or 
    impossible, will the fear of being singled out for enforcement be 
    overcome.'' Detroit Auto Dealers Ass'n, Inc., 111 F.T.C. at 506.
        The respondents appealed the Commission's decision to the United 
    States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. On January 31, 1992, the 
    Court of Appeals affirmed the Commission's decision in substantial part 
    and remanded the case to the Commission for the ``limited purpose'' of 
    reconsidering certain issue, including whether certain respondents may 
    be entitled to the nonstatutory labor defense. In re: Detroit Auto 
    Dealers Ass'n Inc., 955 F.2d 457 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 
    461 (1992).
        The charges against 148 of the respondents were resolved in April 
    and July, 1994, through consent orders substantially similar to the 
    Commission's order of February 22, 1989. Those orders required the 
    dealer respondents to operate their stores for at least a minimum 
    number of hours per week for a one year period.\2\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ See Detroit Automobile Dealers Ass'n Inc., Proposed Consent 
    Agreement With Analysis to Aid Public Comment, 59 Fed. Reg. 6263 
    (Feb. 10, 1994); Final Order, 5 Trade Reg. Rep. (CCH) para.23,532 
    (Apr. 24, 1994), Proposed Consent Agreement With Analysis to Aid 
    Public Comment, 59 Fed. Reg. 23861 (May 9, 1994); Final Order, 5 
    Trade Reg. Rep. (CCH) para.23,587 (July 20, 1994).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Twenty-two other respondents, including the present dealers, 
    participated in the remand proceeding. On June 20, 1995, the Commission 
    issued a decision finding that the dealers did not qualify for the 
    nonstatutory labor exemption. 5 Trade Reg. Rep (CCH) para.23,853 
    (1995). The Commission's order of June 20, 1995 modified in limited 
    respects the Commission's order of February 22, 1989.
        The present dealers again appealed the Commission's order to the 
    United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Following the 
    denial of the dealers' request for a stay of the order by both the 
    Commission and the court, the order went into effect pending appeal. On 
    May 24, 1996, the court once again remanded the case to the Commission. 
    In re: Detroit Auto Dealers Ass'n Inc., 84 F.3d 787 (6th Cir. 1996), 
    rehearing denied, ____ F.3d ____ (6th Cir. Aug. 26, 1996). Without 
    questioning the Commission's finding of liability, the court directed 
    the Commission to consider whether a modification of the Commission's 
    order would be warranted in light of changed factual conditions in the 
    Detroit market. Among other things, the court expressed a belief that 
    most dealers in the Detroit market were now open on Saturdays, which 
    would lessen or eliminate any need to order the dealers to be open that 
    day.
        On November 22, 1996, following the court's denial of the 
    Commission's petition for rehearing, the Commission issued an order 
    remanding the case to an Administrative Law Judge for further 
    evidentiary hearings. Shortly thereafter, the parties entered into the 
    present settlement agreement.
    
    The Proposed Order
    
        The terms of the proposed consent order are substantially similar 
    to those of the Commission's Order of February 22, 1989, as modified by 
    Commission's Order of June 20, 1995. The consent order makes three 
    modest changes to those previous orders, which are incorporated in the 
    consent order by reference. The principal difference, set forth in Part 
    I.A of the proposed order, is that the dealers' obligations under Part 
    III of the previous orders, which required them to maintain a minimum 
    number of hours of operation for a period of one year, has been reduced 
    to the time during which the dealers were in compliance with that 
    provision prior to the Sixth Circuit's issuance of a stay on March 13, 
    1996--approximately six months. While it does not appear to be the case 
    that ``most'' dealers in Detroit are now open on Saturdays as the court 
    stated in its remand decision, it does appear that the Commission's 
    prosecution of this case, together with the remedial provisions of the 
    previous consent orders, has resulted in significant corrective changes 
    in the market. A substantial number of Detroit area dealers are now 
    open on Saturdays. In recognition of this, the settlement relieves 
    respondents of any further affirmative hours obligation.
        The two other changes relate to the effective date of the consent 
    order. The Commission's order of June 22, 1995, went into effect 
    pending appeal, and respondents have filed compliance reports 
    certifying that they have been and remain in compliance as if the order 
    remained in effect. To give respondents credit for compliance with the 
    Commission's previous order to date, the effective date of the consent 
    order will be construed to be the effective date of the Order of June 
    22, 1995. However, the terms and duration of all compliance 
    obligations, other than the Part III affirmative hours provision, 
    remain the same. Part I.B of the consent order specifies the effective 
    date for compliance reporting obligations under Part X of the original 
    order and gives respondents credit for compliance reports filed to 
    date. Part I.C of the consent order sets forth the same effective date 
    for all other order provisions.
        The relevant order provisions, as modified, are as follows:
        Part I of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, prohibited 
    the dealers from entering into or continuing any agreement with any 
    other dealer or dealer association in the Detroit area to establish, 
    maintain or adhere to any
    
    [[Page 13619]]
    
    hours of operation. This provision is not changed by the proposed 
    consent order.
        Part II.A of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, 
    prohibited the dealers from exchanging information or communicating 
    with any other dealer or association concerning hours of operation, 
    except to the extent necessary (i) to comply with any order of the 
    Commission, and (ii) after two (2) years from the date the order 
    becomes final, to incorporate individual dealers' hours of operation in 
    lawful joint advertisements. Part II.A has two exceptions to the two-
    year prohibition against the inclusion of individual dealers' hours of 
    operation in joint advertising. First, the prohibition would not apply 
    to individual dealers that are legally operated under common control. 
    Second, the prohibition would not apply to joint advertising for 
    special events such as tent sales, mall sales, or annual sales when 
    hours of operation are extended. These provisions are not changed by 
    the proposed consent order.
        Part II.B of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, 
    prohibited the dealers from requesting, recommending, coercing, 
    influencing, inducing, encouraging or persuading any dealer or dealer 
    association to maintain, adopt or adhere to any hours of operation. 
    This provision is not changed by the proposed consent order.
        Part III of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, as 
    modified by the Commission's Order of June 20, 1995, required the 
    dealers to maintain for a period of one year, a minimum of sixty-four 
    hours of operation per week for the sale and lease of motor vehicles, 
    or alternatively, a minimum of an average of ten and a half hours 
    during weekdays plus an additional eight hours on Saturdays. Under the 
    proposed consent order, the term of this requirement is reduced to the 
    period for which the dealers were in compliance with the requirement 
    pending appeal of the Commission's order of June 20, 1995. Accordingly, 
    under the proposed consent order the dealers will have no further 
    obligations to maintain minimum hours of operation.
        Part IV of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, required 
    the dealers, beginning thirty days after the order became final and for 
    a minimum of four weeks thereafter, to place at least four weekly 
    advertisements in Detroit newspapers explaining that the dealers were 
    required by Commission order to offer extended shopping hours for one 
    year. The dealers fulfilled their obligations under this provision 
    pending appeal of the Commission's June 20, 1995 order. Accordingly, 
    the proposed consent order imposes no further obligations under this 
    provision.
        Part V of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, required the 
    dealers, while Part III of the order was in effect, to disclose their 
    hours of operation in all advertising, with limited exceptions. Since 
    the proposed consent order limits the dealers' obligations under Part 
    III to their compliance to date, the dealers will have no further 
    obligations under Part V.
        Parts VI, VII and VIII of the Commission's order of February 22, 
    1989, applied only to the association respondents. Accordingly, the 
    dealers will have no obligations under these provisions.
        Part IX of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, required 
    the dealers to give a copy of the order to each employee and, for a 
    period of five years, to give a copy to each new employee involved in 
    motor vehicle sales or leasing. This provision is not changed by the 
    proposed consent order.
        Part X of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, required the 
    dealers to file annual compliance reports for a period of five years. 
    The proposed consent order would give the dealers credit for compliance 
    reports filed since the effective date of the Commission's order of 
    June 20, 1995.
        Part XI of the Commission's order of February 22, 1989, required 
    the dealers, for a period of five years, to inform the Commission of 
    any change in corporate status that may affect compliance obligations 
    under the order, or, with respect to individual respondents, of any 
    change in employment. This provision is not changed by the proposed 
    consent order.
        The purpose of this analysis is to facilitate public comment on the 
    proposed order, and it is not intended to constitute an official 
    interpretation of the agreement and the proposed order or to modify in 
    any way their terms.
    
    Parties to the Consent Agreement
    
    Dealer Respondents
    Crestwood Dodge, Inc., 32850 Ford Road, Garder City, MI 48135
    Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., a/k/a Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 
    Inc., 1950 W. Maple Road, Troy, MI 48084
    Bob Dusseau, Inc., a/k/a Bob Dusseau Lincoln-Mercury, 31625 Grant River 
    Avenue, Farmington, MI 48024
    Bob Maxey Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Inc., 16901 Mack Avenue, Detroit, MI 
    48224
    Crest Lincoln-Mercury Sales, Inc., 36200 Van Dyke Avenue, Sterling 
    Heights, MI 48077
    Stewart Chevrolet, Inc., 23755 Allen Road, Woodhaven, MI 48183
    Woody Pontiac Sales, Inc., 12140 Joseph Campau, Hamtramck, MI 48212
    Jack Demmer Ford, Inc., a/k/a/ Jack Demmer Ford, 37300 Michigan Avenue, 
    Wayne, MI 48184
    Al Long Ford, Inc., 13711 E. Eight Mile Road, Warren, MI 48089
    Ed Schmid Ford, Inc., 21600 Woodward Avenue, Ferndale, MI 48220
    Ray Whitfield Ford, a/k/a/ Ray Whitfield Ford, Inc., 10725 S. Telegraph 
    Road, Taylor, MI 48180
    Individual Respondents
    Robert C. Borst, c/o Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury, Inc., 1950 W. Maple 
    Road, Troy, MI 48084
    Robert Dusseau, a/k/a/ Robert F. Dusseau, c/o Bob Dusseau Lincoln-
    Mercury, 31625 Grant River Avenue, Farmington, MI 48024
    Robert Maxey, c/o Bob Maxey Lincoln-Mercury Sales Inc., 16901 Mack 
    Avenue, Detroit, MI 48224
    William Ritchie, a/k/a/ William R. Ritchie, c/o Crest Lincoln-Mercury 
    Sales, Inc., 36200 Van Dyke Avenue, Sterling Heights, MI 48077
    Gordon L. Stewart, a/k/a/ Gordon Stewart, c/o Steward Chevrolet, Inc., 
    23755 Allen Road, Woodhaven, MI 48183
    Woodrow W. Woody, c/o Woody Pontiac Sales, Inc., 12140 Joseph Campau, 
    Hamtramck, MI 48212
    John E. Demmer, a/k/a/ Jack E. Demmer, c/o Jack Demmer Ford, Inc., 
    37300 Michigan Avenue, Wayne, MI 48184
    Edward F. Schmid, a/k/a/ Edward Schmid, c/o Ed Schmid Ford, Inc., 21600 
    Woodward Avenue, Ferndale, MI 48220
    Raymond J. Whitfield, a/k/a/ Raymond Whitfield, c/o Ray Whitfield Ford, 
    10725 S. Telegraph Road, Taylor, MI 48180
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 97-7261 Filed 3-20-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/21/1997
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Proposed consent agreement.
Document Number:
97-7261
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before May 20, 1997.
Pages:
13617-13619 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
File No. D-9189
PDF File:
97-7261.pdf