Dependable Sales & Service, Inc. v. TrueCar, Inc., ---
F.Supp.3d ----, 2018 WL 2356658, No. 15-cv-1742 (S.D.N.Y. May 9, 2018)
Plaintiffs, 108 individual automobile dealerships, alleged
false advertising by TrueCar’s ads promising a “no-haggle,” no-negotiation
car-buying experience, thus diverting business from the plaintiff dealers to
TrueCar-affiliated dealers. Here, the court granted TrueCar’s motion in limine
to exclude the expert report of plaintiffs’ damages and causation expert,
mostly because he reasoned that 100% of TrueCar’s sales from buyers located in
a plaintiff dealer’s geographic market were caused by the company’s “no-haggle”
claim, and that this claim was always false (even if the buyer bought the exact
car he or she wanted at the exact price quoted by TrueCar), without accounting
for other factors that could have caused the sales.
TrueCar’s ads touted multiple other features, including
research tools showing what other consumers paid for a vehicle’s make and
model, “transparency” about dealer fees and “[g]uaranteed savings.” Nor did the
expert’s analysis account for the possibility that a consumer might have been
influenced by other considerations in deciding to purchase from a
TrueCar-affiliated dealer, such as their past interactions with that dealership
or the plaintiff dealership, personal recommendations, or non-TrueCar
promotions. He testified that the
industry knew that negotiations were a “pain point” and “that telling people
that they could save money without negotiating was a magic bullet, that that really
penetrated to consumers,” referring to a study done for TrueCar in which respondents
reacted favorably to messages touting “[a] negotiation-free way to save
thousands off MSRP on a new car” (70% of respondents), free price reports
showing what “others paid for the car you want” (65%), upfront pricing
information (56%), the ability to “[s]ave time, save money, and never overpay
for your next car” (52%), and average savings of $3,078 off the manufacturer’s
suggested retail price (48%). But to the extent that he relied on that study,
it contradicted his assumption that 100% of buyers bought because of the
no-hassle claim.
Further, TrueCar only used the no-haggle claim in part of
its selling history, and TrueCar’s own expert found “no discernable,
systematic, and/or persistent changes in these TrueCar-related sales” on either
end of the promotion. This evidence was “open to some legitimate challenge as
to its duration and significance,” but it still didn’t support plaintiffs’
expert report. Likewise, his causation
analysis also failed to weigh that a significant percentage (2/3 in 2014) of new
vehicles sold through TrueCar were transacted through “affinity partners” such
as American Express and the United Services Automobile Association, who made
TrueCar’s services available through their own customer websites and smartphone
apps, using their own branding and giving the no-haggle claim less emphasis. The
expert treated those sales as 100% caused by the no-haggle claim, which the court
found to undercut the reliability and relevance of his causation analysis and
weigh against its admissibility.
Separately, the analysis also concluded that any sale made
to a TrueCar-affiliated dealer would necessarily have gone to a plaintiff
dealer, as opposed to some other dealer in the same geographic market. But some
plaintiffs were in densely populated areas with heavy competition, and dealers
also often sell vehicles to consumers outside of that dealer’s defined market,
and likewise lose sales to consumers who buy from dealers in an adjacent market.
Plaintiffs’ analysis didn’t adequately weigh the likelihood that sales made to
a TrueCar-affiliated dealer might have otherwise gone to some other competing
dealer, other than a plaintiff.
One final embarrassment was that 23 plaintiff dealers were,
at some point, TrueCar-affiliated, and 19 of those sought damages based on
sales that they themselves made through TrueCar’s allegedly false ads, which “weighs
heavily against the reliability and relevance” of the report.
The expert also attributed $1,602 in lost-profits damages
per car, the average profit per car calculated by the National Automobile
Dealers Association. But the evidence showed it varied a lot between various
plaintiff dealers, both above and below that average; he didn’t persuasively
show that this “cookie-cutter approach” was reliable. Relatedly, the court denied a motion to redact
individual dealers’ net profits, holding that the public interest in judicial
access outweighed dealers’ privacy interests:
Evidence on this issue was highly
relevant to the performance of the judicial function and the judicial process,
and the parties seek to redact information that the Court has discussed and
relied upon in this Memorandum and Order. The presumption of public access to
this information is high because it played a direct role in the adjudication of
TrueCar’s motion. The plaintiff dealers may have an interest in the privacy of
certain commercial data, but they are the ones who elected to bring this action
and to pursue a damages theory that turned on net profits per sale.
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