Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Apple’s app fees subject of suit

Company says it is just middleman

- GREG STOHR AND NAOMI NIX

Simplicity is supposed to be a selling point for Apple Inc.’s iPhone. It may be a problem at the U.S. Supreme Court.

The court will hear arguments Monday on accusation­s that Apple is using its market dominance to jack up prices for iPhone apps. A ruling against Apple, letting a lawsuit go forward, could add to pressure the company already faces to cut the 30 percent commission it charges on app sales.

The case turns on what happens when iPhone users buy something at the Apple App Store. In allowing the suit, a federal appeals court said the transactio­n is a simple one in which consumers buy directly from Apple. Apple says it’s more complicate­d, with the company serving as a middleman connecting app developers with users.

The distinctio­n is critical because of a 1977 Supreme Court ruling that says only direct purchasers of a product can collect damages for overpricin­g under federal antitrust law. That decision was designed in part to ensure companies don’t have to pay twice for the same

misconduct.

Apple is part of an app economy that will grow from $82 billion last year to $157 billion in 2022, according to App Annie projection­s.

Apple and its tech industry allies say a decision allowing the consumer lawsuit could open other companies that run online marketplac­es and platforms to expensive antitrust claims. A broad ruling could affect Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Amazon.com Inc., Facebook Inc., Etsy Inc. and DoorDash Inc., Apple and its supporters say.

“Any matchmakin­g service that operates on the Internet from DoorDash to Etsy is going to be subject to duplicativ­e damages,” said Marianela Lopez-Galdos, director of competitio­n and regulatory policy at the Computer & Communicat­ions Industry Associatio­n, which backs Apple in the case.

But Apple’s critics say its control over the App Store makes it unlike other Internet marketplac­es. Apple decides what apps can be sold, gives developers a limited number of prices they can charge and tells users the App Store is the only place they can get apps, lawyers pressing the suit say.

When a user buys an app, Apple collects the money, keeps the 30 percent commission and gives the rest to the developer. The company told the high court it passed $26.5 billion on to developers last year.

The App Store is “really unique,” said Mark Rifkin, one of the lawyers pressing the suit. “Apple has put itself in the distributi­on chain, and it makes us deal with Apple in a way no one else does.”

Apple says the focus of the lawsuit is the 30 percent commission, something it says is paid by the developers, not the app purchasers. Although the consumers say they pay for the commission­s through higher app prices, Apple says those are the type of “passthroug­h” damages barred under the Supreme Court’s 1977

Illinois Brick v. Illinois ruling. “The party first and directly injured by an alleged overcharge has the entire damages claim,” Apple argued in court papers. The company’s lead Supreme Court lawyer, Dan Wall, declined to discuss the case in advance of the argument.

The suit, filed in federal court in Oakland, Calif., seeks class-action status and potentiall­y hundreds of millions of dollars.

Apple’s supporters include ACT/The App Associatio­n, a developer trade group whose sponsors include Apple, Microsoft and eBay. The group says the appeals court ruling threatens to disrupt what has been an innovation-friendly system for developers and platforms.

App Associatio­n President Morgan Reed said the appeals court misunderst­ood the relationsh­ip between developers and platforms, improperly looking at platforms as distributo­rs that buy from vendors and resell to customers, rather than as conduits that simply connect the two.

That distinctio­n “sounds small” but is “at the core of a multitrill­ion-dollar global industry,” Reed said.

Thirty-one states including Arkansas support the consumers, urging the Supreme Court to allow the lawsuit and also to eliminate the direct-purchaser requiremen­t altogether by overturnin­g the Illinois Brick decision.

“Illinois Brick’s rule is increasing­ly difficult to apply in the modern world, with its growing commerce in intangible rights through new platforms,” the states argued. “This case is a prime example.”

Most states already allow downstream purchasers to collect damages, and the group says courts have been able to ensure that companies don’t have to double-pay. The states are led by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, and Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller, a Democrat.

Antitrust cases sometimes, but not always, divide the Supreme Court along ideologica­l lines. In its most recent term, the court voted 5-4 to throw out a lawsuit that accused American Express Co. of thwarting competitio­n by prohibitin­g merchants from steering customers to cards with lower fees.

The court will rule by June in the latest case, Apple v. Pepper, 17-204.

Thirty-one states including Arkansas support the consumers, urging the Supreme Court to allow the lawsuit and also to eliminate the direct-purchaser requiremen­t altogether by overturnin­g the Illinois Brick decision.

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