Full opinion text
BARNES, Circuit Judge. Appellees as plaintiffs on July 21,1952, filed a complaint under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act against the Acoustical Contractors Association of Southern California, Inc., and certain members thereof (six individuals, and eight corporations, individuals, or partnerships doing business under a fictitious firm name). The Flintkote Company and four John Does were also joined as defendants. The essential interstate commerce was alleged to have been in acoustical tile. To understand this case, it is first necessary to look at the pleadings. All defendants, other than Flintkote, were charged with violating the law :in the following particulars: “For some time prior to the date of the filing of this complaint and continuously since prior to January 1, 1951, the defendants herein, with the exception of Flintkote, well-knowing all of the foregoing facts have been engaged in a combination and conspiracy to restrain and to monopolize trade and commerce in acoustical tile in violation of * * ” the Sherman Act. The general plan and purpose was: “1. To maintain and adhere to non-competitive prices * * * “2. To refrain from competing with each other * * * “3. To allocate the sale and installation of acoustical tile among members of the defendant, The Association, * * * “4. To exclude non-member acoustical tile contractors from their legal right to compete in the purchase, sale, and installation of acoustical tile in Los Angeles and surrounding areas by use of the following means among others: “(a) By boycotting, threatening to boycott, and otherwise coercing manufacturers * * * “(b) By coneertedly entering inordinately low bids for jobs * * ” [Tr. 10, 11] It was then alleged that plaintiff entered into an agreement shortly prior to January 1, 1952, to buy from Flintkote “a continuous supply of a complete line of acoustical tile;” and that: “In or about March 1952, and solely because of the active and successful competition of plaintiffs with members of the defendant, The Association, and the effect of such competition on the illegal, non-competitive price fixing policies and activities of said members, the defendant Flintkote was induced to terminate its agreement to supply plaintiffs with acoustical tile products by reason and because of the concerted action and coercion exerted upon said defendant by members of the defendant, The Association, in the form of threats to boycott Flintkote products in the Los Angeles area and elsewhere in the State of California by said defendants in the event Flintkote continued supplying said products to plaintiffs.” [Tr. 13, 14] A First Amended Complaint was lodged January 28, 1953, and filed March 23, 1953, by appellees. Plaintiffs’ theory of their case was changed to directly charge the defendant Flintkote Company, with agreeing to sell acoustical tile to plaintiffs in the latter part of 1951, and that “all defendants” from an unknown date “prior to the year 1951, and continuously thereafter to date of filing the complaint” conspired to restrain and have restrained trade and commerce, in violation of Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act. Thus, the amended complaint charges Flintkote with being a member of the conspiracy. In their original complaint, plaintiffs asked for $75,000 damages; that any award be trebled; for costs of suit and attorney’s fees; and that defendants be enjoined from continuing any of the alleged unlawful practices. In their amended complaint, plaintiffs asked for $100,000 damages, without any prayer for trebling the same; for costs of suit and attorney’s fees; that defendants be enjoined from continuing any of the alleged unlawful practices; that the defendant Flintkote be enjoined from any agreement with other defendants to refuse to sell to plaintiffs, or in any way agreeing with other defendants, to perpetuate or assist in perpetuating the alleged conspiracies, their purposes or objects; and that Flintkote, finally, be required to “ * * * continue said contract and agreement so long as there exists no reason under sound business principles and practices for terminating the same.” Flintkote, answering the Amended Complaint, asserted with care and verbosity common to pleadings, a general denial; alleged it had not participated in any conspiracy in restraint of trade, or to create or maintain a monopoly; set forth that it sold tile to three of the defendant’s contractors, and had at times sold to three others and to plaintiffs; admitted several sales of acoustical tile to plaintiffs; alleged it made no contract with plaintiffs of any kind, nor any contract to supply plaintiffs, either on any continuing basis, or any basis, or at all. As a first and separate defense, Flintkote alleged that it sold one carload lot to plaintiffs for resale in the San Bernardino-Riverside area (as distinguished from the Los Angeles area); that said sale was conditioned upon an understanding that plaintiffs would use the tile so sold in the San Bernardino-Riverside area, and not engage in the contracting business in the Los Angeles metropolitan area; that when plaintiffs breached said condition of sale, and contracted for installations in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the defendant Flintkote Company refused to sell plaintiffs further tile. This answer was filed on June 26,1953. On July 31, 3953, a stipulation and order was entered dismissing the cause of action as to all named defendants except Flintkote. On May 4, 1955, the jury trial commenced. At the start of the trial, it was brought to the court’s attention that $20,000 had been paid to the plaintiffs in exchange for a covenant not to sue, running in favor of all defendants except Flintkote. It was stipulated that the court could advise the jury “that a settlement of the action had been made as between the plaintiff and all defendants except the defendant Flintkote, but the Court shall not state the monetary consideration, keeping that away from the attention of the jury.” Because of this settlement, some of the jury instructions requested by plaintiffs and filed by them on April 29, 1955, in their reference to defendants, were not accurate. Before the jury was empanelled, counsel for defendant called to the court’s and opposing counsel’s attention, “that it would be almost imperative that plaintiffs’ instructions be recast,” [Tr. 155] “because in some instances we even have a situation where you tell the jury that they could find against some but not all the defendants * * * ” It was further agreed by court and counsel, before trial, that because there were both legal and equitable issues in the case, the “first were to be handled by the jury and the latter by the judge.” [Tr. 158 to 161, incl] The record does not disclose that any action, affirmative or negative, was taken on the demand for injunctive relief. Flintkote Company now appeals from a judgment against it, based on a jury verdict for $50,000, trebled by the court to $150,000, plus $25,000 attorney’s fees, plus $165.70 costs, minus the $20,000 received by plaintiff-appellees from certain original parties defendant other than appellant, or a total judgment of $155,165.-70. Appellant urges fifteen grounds for reversal. We believe we can best discuss these fifteen alleged errors by grouping them as follows: First: The sufficiency of the evidence, (particularly as to knowledge by the defendant of the conspiracy, and its participation therein) to support a verdict of violation of the antitrust laws. Second: Alleged errors in admission of evidence. Third: Alleged errors in instructions, other than damages. Fourth: Alleged error in refusing to grant a new trial, in instructions respecting damages, in the fixing of attorney’s fees, and in the method of crediting the $20,000 payment. First: The Sufficiency of the Evidence Was there any substantial evidence properly before the jury from which it could reasonably draw the conclusion on an issue of fact, that defendant Flintkote had violated the antitrust laws? Defendant maintained its refusal to deal with plaintiff was a legitimate business decision; that it had no part :'.n the alleged conspiracy among the original “Association defendants” to restrain trade. Hence it is urged, the Flintkote refusal to sell cannot be participation in a conspiracy, and Flintkote having no knowledge that such a conspiracy existed, could much less have knowingly participated therein. “The requirement is dual,” says appellant, “it requires both knowledge and participation, and neither is sufficient without the other,” relying on United States v. Falcone, 1910, 311 U.S. 205, at page 210, 61 S.Ct. 204, at page 207, 85 L.Ed. 128, where the Supreme Court said: “The gist of the offense of conspiracy * * * is agreement among the conspirators to commit an offense attended by an act of one or more of the conspirators to effect the object of the conspiracy. [Citing cases.] Those having no knowledge of the conspiracy are not conspirators [citing cases]; and one who without more furnishes supplies to an illicit distiller is not guiltj' of conspiracy even though his sale may have furthered the object of a conspiracy to which the distiller was a party but of which the supplier had no knowledge”; and on Weniger v. United States, 9 Cir., 47 F.2d 692, at page 693 where this Court said: “The failure of a person to prevent the carrying out of a conspiracy, even though he has the power so to do, will not make him guilty of the offense without further proof that he has in some affirmative way consented to be a party thereto. Neither will the commission of an overt act, though unlawful in itself, be enough to show that the actor was a party to the conspiracy. The law requires proof of the common and unlawful design and the knowing participation therein of the persons charged as conspirators before a conviction is justified.” We should first recognize that the cases cited by appellant correctly state the law. We must also agree that on the question of Flintkote’s knowledge as to whether the admitted conspiracy did or did not exist, all direct evidence is that the officers and employees of Flintkote did not know. That is the unvarying testimony of all defendant’s employees. But the problem is not that simply solved. Neither knowledge of the conspiracy alleged, nor participation therein, need be proved by direct evidence, even in criminal prosecutions where the rule of proof is more strict than in civil conspiracy cases, United States v. Univis Lens Co., 88 F.Supp. 809, 813. As noted by the Supreme Court in Paoli v. United States, 352 U.S. 232, 77 S.Ct. 294, 297, note 4, 1 L.Ed.2d 278, “Participation in a criminal conspiracy may be shown by circumstantial as well as direct evidence. See, e. g., Blumenthal v. United States, 332 U.S. 539, 557, 68 S.Ct. 248, 256, 92 L.Ed. 154; Glasser v. United States, 315 U.S. 60, 80, 62 S.Ct. 457, 469, 86 L.Ed. 680; Direct Sales Co. v. United States, 319 U.S. 703, 63 S.Ct. 1265, 87 L.Ed. 1674; United States v. Manton, 2 Cir., 107 F.2d 834, 839.” It is likewise true that: “A conviction resting solely upon circumstantial evidence is not an innovation. It is, we think, well established that the proof and evidence in an anti-trust conspiracy ease is, in most cases, circumstantial. Proof of a formal agreement is unnecessary, and were the law otherwise such conspiracies would flourish; profit, rather than punishment, would be the reward. See American Tobacco Co. v. U. S., 6 Cir., 147 F.2d 93, affirmed 328 U.S. 781, 66 S.Ct. 1125, 90 L.Ed. 1575.” C-O-Two Fire Equipment Co. v. United States, 9 Cir. 197 F.2d 489, at page 494. And see cases cited: Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, § 179, p. 354, Note 20. Here the evidence before the jury showed the existence and operation of an allocation arrangement, by which acoustical jobs were assigned in rough rotation to one or another of the acoustical contractors who were members of the Acoustical Contractor’s Association. There was evidence that bidders were told what to hid, not based upon what the cost of the job was, but to enable a certain contractor to get the job. Considerable time was spent in introducing and interpreting the contractor’s “take off sheets,” and what they meant to the workings of the conspiracy. Complimentary bidding by members of the group, other than the one designated to get the job, was engaged in. In fact, both plaintiffs had at one time worked for an employer engaged in such a conspiracy, and plaintiff Lysfjord had protested to his employer his inability to compete for installation jobs because of such conspiracy. There was no direct evidence that Flintkote, as a seller of tile and not an installer, participated directly in that original conspiracy between the dealers, but there was evidence from which an inference might have been drawn by the trier of fact warranting the belief that the defendant Flintkote, through acting as supplier to the conspirators on some of the jobs, could have acquired knowledge of the conspiracy; and there was evidence which warranted the conclusion that Flintkote, with such inferred knowledge, participated in the conspiracy, and aided it, by its refusal to sell to plaintiffs. If that refusal was not the result of the exercise of ordinary business judgment, but the result of threats made and pressure applied by members of the known conspiracy to and against Flintkote, the act of refusing to sell would constitute knowing participation. Because one is coerced by economic threats to participate in or aid and abet an illegal scheme does not excuse the actor. There was before the jury substantial inferential evidence that Flintkote had knowledge of the conspiracy, and joined it and had acted in furtherance of it, when we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. The verdict of a jury will be sustained if there is substantial evidence, properly before the jury, to support it. Glasser v. United States, 1942, 315 U.S. 60, 69, 62 S.Ct. 457, 86 L.Ed. 680; Woodard Laboratories v. United States, 9 Cir., 198 F.2d 995; Las Vegas Merchants Plumbers Ass’n v. United States, 9 Cir., 210 F.2d 732, 742. Appellant, relying primarily on Johnson v. J. H. Yost Lumber Co., 8 Cir., 117 F.2d 53, 61-62, urges that the facts of threats (assuming there were threats) will not support an inference of knowledge of a conspiracy. Such a broad statement is too general and sweeping. Proof of the fact of threats might infer knowledge, or it might not, depending on the nature of the threats, their number, their frequency, and more directly and importantly, their content and what they disclosed, directly or by inference, to the defendant Flintkote, viewed in the then existing factual situation under which they were made and received. Where there has been proof (a) that a conspiring group of tile dealers disclosed to a supplier, directly or by inference, an accomplished unlawful purpose and intent to boycott non-participating dealers, (and hence disclosed the existence of a conspiracy) and (b) thereafter one or more dealers had threatened the supplier on numerous occasions that they intended jointly and severally to refuse to buy from the supplier if the supplier continued to sell acoustical tile to plaintiffs, and (c) if the supplier, having been selling to non-conspirators, thereafter refused to sell to non-conspiring dealers because of the threats, it cannot be maintained, as a matter of law, that such decision not to sell was a lawful exercise of the supplier’s business judgment. It is true that one engaged in private enterprise may select his own customers, and in the absence of an illegal agreement, may sell or refuse to sell to a customer for good cause, or for no cause whatever. But it is not for the seller to finally decide that it was, for a good business reason, or no reason, that he refused to deal. That decision, placed in its proper perspective of circumstances and facts known to the seller, must be judged by the trier of facts, to determine if it was an innocent and lawful exercise of the seller’s private right, or an act which showed knowing participation in an unlawful conspiracy. Were it otherwise, there could never be a civil judgment nor any criminal conviction against any manufacturer of products flowing in interstate commerce. He could merely state—“despite my knowledge of a conspiracy which existed, which I knew to be unlawful, I’m innocent and cannot be held liable because I say I exercised my business judgment, and I can refuse to sell to anyor.e, and that is lawful, no matter what the circumstances may be.” Our conclusion in this matter does no violence to the Yost case. There the court says: “From the mere fact of refusing to sell to plaintiffs, there can therefore arise no inference of an unlawful agreement, because one may lawfully select his own customers. [Cases cited.] There must be substantial evidence furnishing some basis from which the alleged fact of such an agreement may reasonably be inferred. A fraudulent conspiracy may be shown by circumstantial evidence, but the facts and circumstances relied upon must attain the dignity of substantial evidence and not be such as merely to create a suspicion. Here, it appears that a number of these defendants had already refused to sell the plaintiffs even before the date of the alleged conspiracy. Others thought it had business to sell them, and as plaintiffs themselves alleged, these defendants were coei-ced. Where there were two dealers in the same product at the same city, it was not thought good business to sell to both plaintiffs and the other dealer. In most instances, the other dealer had been handling the products before the arrival of plaintiffs. In some cases, plaintiffs had invaded the trade territory of established dealers handling products of these suppliers, and that was at least distasteful to these defendants and there seemed to have been ample reason of a business character for the suppliers to refuse to sell to plaintiffs.” (Emphasis added.) Johnson v. J. H. Yost Lumber Co., supra, 117 F.2d at page 61. The Yost case, relying on the BeechNut case [Federal Trade Comm. v. Beech-Nut Packing Co.], 257 U.S. 441, 42 S.Ct. 150, 66 L.Ed. 307, specifically refers to facts which “went beyond the simple refusal to sell.” The rule of freedom of sale to anyone or no one is not absolute. Nor can it be tested in a vacuum. The Colgate case [United States v. Colgate & Co.], 250 U.S. 300, 39 S.Ct. 465, 63 L.Ed. 992, “was not intended to give blanket sanction for individual discretion in refusal to deal. The Court soon determined that its holding did not extend to protect a course of dealing which inferentially spelled out the factor of agreement that Colgate lacked. More important, the Court’s landmark decision in Federal Trade Commission v. Beech-Nut Packing Co. places any refusal to deal in its business perspective and then against the full facts scrutinizes all pertinent antitrust prohibitions the trade pattern suggests. Viewed in the larger business setting, even individually conceived refusals to deal may become an integral element in a violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act * * * Also, Section 2 may forbid refusals to deal for monopolistic ends. Eastman Kodak Co. of New York v. Southern Photo Materials Co., 1927, 273 U.S. 359, 47 S.Ct. 400, 71 L.Ed. 684.” [Report of the Attorney General’s National Committee to Study the Antitrust Laws, March 21, 1955.] The decisions have placed and evaluated refusals to deal in the business setting in which they appear. While refusals to deal in themselves are legally protected, they are examined in their market context. Only thorough-going factual inquiry into the surrounding business circumstances can characterize a refusal to deal as part of a restrictive course of conduct incompatible with antitrust objectives. If we assume, therefore, that all evidence which was introduced was properly before the jury, we cannot hold as a matter of law that there was no substantial evidence from which a trier of fact could not have inferred the existence of a conspiracy, and that the defendant Flintkote knowingly participated therein. Permitting this issue to go to the jury was not error. Second: Alleged Errors in Admission of Evidence. Throughout the foregoing consideration of the first problem here presented, we have assumed all evidence before the jury was properly admitted. It is fpr this reason that the next point appellant raises—that evidence was erroneously admitted—must be considered most carefully. In doing so, we now reach appellant’s point 2, (introduction against Flintkote of evidence of the conspiracy between the contractors); point 3, (the Waldron testimony respecting Ragland’s alleged statements of alleged pressure by the conspiring dealers on Flintkote); and point 4, (the Lysfjord testimony respecting Ragland’s alleged same statements). At this same time, we also will consider Krause’s alleged telephone conversation with Lysfjord. A. Introduction as Against the Sole Defendant, Flintkote, of the Facts Relating to the Alleged Conspiracy Between the Acoustical Contractors. We must first consider the unique factual situation in this case. The acoustical contractors originally sued had paid, before trial, for a covenant not to sue further. This was accompanied by a dismissal. The gravamen of the amended complaint was that Flintkote had joined in an already existing conspiracy. It was therefore incumbent on plaintiffs (1) to establish the prior existence of the conspiracy; who were its supposed members; how they supposedly operated; what their conspiratorial purpose was; and how they brought about their alleged purposes; and (2) Flintkote’s subsequent connection with it, before evidence of the acts or statements of alleged co-conspirators would be admissible against the defendant. Two different though not wholly unrelated problems were thus raised. One was the necessity of making a prima facie showing of Flintkote’s knowing participation in the alleged conspiracy, and the other was the order of proof in which the evidence thereof would be introduced. We turn to the latter point first. The rules relating to proof of a civil conspiracy take us into one of the most difficult areas of today’s law. As Mr. Justice Jackson said, in his concurrence in the leading case of Krulewitch v. United States, 336 U.S. 440, at page 452, 69 S.Ct. 716, at page 723, 93 L.Ed. 790: “When the trial starts, the accused feels the full impact of the conspiracy strategy. Strictly, the prosecution should first establish prima facie the conspiracy and identify the conspirators, after which evidence of acts and declarations of each in the course of the execution are admissible against all. But the order of proof in so sprawling a charge is difficult for a judge to control. As a practical matter, the accused often is confronted with a hodgepodge of acts and statements by others which he may never have authorized or intended, or even known about, but which help to persuade the jury of existence of the conspiracy itself. In other words, a conspiracy often is proved by evidence that is admissible only upon assumption that conspiracy existed.” (Emphasis added.) We are in an area of evidentiary law where much is left to the discretion of the trial judge. The trial court has a wide discretion in the admission of evidence which even remotely tends to establish conspiracy. Clune v. United States, 159 U.S. 590, 592, 593, 16 S.Ct. 125, 40 L.Ed. 269; Devoe v. United States, 8 Cir., 103 F.2d 584, certiorari denied 308 U.S. 571, 60 S.Ct. 84, 84 L.Ed. 479; Nee v. United States, 3 Cir., 267 F. 84, 87; United States v. Sebo, 7 Cir., 101 F.2d 889, 891. The trial court has absolute judicial discretion as to the order of proof. United States v. Manton, 2 Cir., 107 F.2d 834; United States v. Newman, 9 Cir., 156 F.2d 8. If he believes it better to allow evidence to be introduced, subject to its being connected up at a later time, that is his prerogative and such rulings are not error. That procedure is what counsel for plaintiff proposed to follow in this case, when he preliminarily offered proof of conspiracy between the acoustical contractors before he had introduced any proof of the defendant Flintkote’s participation therein. The court specifically deferred and reserved a final ruling on the admissibility of this evidence until after the plaintiffs’ case was fully in; and advised counsel for the defendant his rights to move to exclude the entire line of testimony were protected. It was not error for the court initially to invoke this “rule of convenience,” as it was denominated in the courtroom. The court had very carefully and properly brought home to counsel for the plaintiffs the necessity of proving by competent evidence that Flintkote “yielded to the combine, and became a member of it.” [Tr. 294] Was competent independent evidence ever introduced? B. The Plaintiffs’ Testimony as to Statements of Others. This brings us to a consideration of the alleged errors in admitting the testimony of Waldron and Lysfjord, as to the alleged statements of Ragland and others. The only evidence that plaintiffs offered to prove defendant’s “yielding,” and the joining by Flintkote of the conspiracy, other than the act itself of refusing to sell, was the respective testimony of Waldron and Lysfjord relating to (a) alleged admissions of Baymiller; and (b) alleged admissions of Ragland; and (c) the testimony of Lysfjord. with respect to a telephone conversation directly with Krause. These alleged statements or admissions can be divided into three conversations: Conversation Number 1 was a hearsay statement largely made up of conclusions, by Ragland to Waldron and Lysfjord on or about February 1, 1952, at the Atlantic Avenue office of Aabeta Company covering (a) what Krause allegedly told Ragland on a previous date at the Flintkote office ; (b) what Howard had “complained” to someone about, at or about that date, perhaps in the hearing of Rag-land, at the Flintkote office; (c) about conversations occurring at an alleged meeting of certain of the conspirators, (Krause, Howard, Newport and Lewis) wherein “boycott” was threatened by Mr. Newport, and objections were voiced by others. Conversation Number 2 was a portion of the conversation allegedly occurring on February 19, 1952, between Ragland, Baymiller, Thompson, Lysfjord and Waldron, when the plaintiffs were advised of Flintkote’s refusal to sell further. Conversation Number S was an alleged telephone call between Krause and Lysfjord occurring “after the sevevance” [Tr. 267], of relations between Flintkote and the plaintiffs, and after the date the conspiracy was found by the court to have ended. Upon motion of defendant, this conversation was struck out [Tr. 268], but after argument, the ruling was “recalled,” apparently to be re-considered at the end of plaintiffs’ case, when all defendants’ motions to strike were denied. It is difficult to understand from the record precisely the theory upon which these various conversations were held admissible. At times both court and counsel talk of “res gestae,” and at other times of “admissions,” sometimes referring to “overt acts in furtherance of a conspiracy,” at other times to the theory of “agency.” These three conversations had by plaintiffs, involve individuals in two distinguishable categories—Ragland, and Baymiller, employees of the defendant Flintkote; and Krause, an alleged “officer, director and managing director of Coast Insulating Products, a California corporation,” one of the dismissed defendants at time of the trial. The status of the various declarants poses distinct issues as to the admissibility of each of their statements. Requisite to the admission of incriminating statements attributed to Krause, Newport, and Ragland (in an alleged capacity other than as an agent of defendant) is a prima facie showing of Flintkote’s participation in the conspiracy by competent evidence apart from the alleged statements. On the other hand, no such foundation need be laid for the alleged admissions of Baymiller and Ragland, if they were acting as agents within the scope of their employment for the defendant company. We start with the major premise that all such statements were hearsay. In fact, when Waldron or Lysfjord told the jury what Ragland said Krause had told him, we have hearsay placed upon hearsay; and when the plaintiffs testified that Ragland told them what Krause or Newport or Howard had said at a meeting, concerning which there had been no proper foundation laid as to whether Ragland was present, we have hearsay placed upon hearsay placed upon hearsay. It is true that there are so many exceptions to the hearsay rule that much of the evidence which decides law suits is made up of hearsay evidence. But this does not eliminate the hearsay rule as a vital and important rule of evidence, nor permit us, or the lower court, to open wide the floodgates to any evidence, in total disregard of the rule. One of the very best reasons for the hearsay objection is to prevent the presentation of self-serving statements. The instant case is a perfect example of the reason and of the necessity for the rule. Without in any way passing upon or inferring as to the credibility of witnesses who testified, we here have two of the three most interested parties to the law suit ascribing vital culpatory statements to Krause; to Newport; to Howard; to Baymiller; to Thompson; to Lewis and to Ragland, each one of whom (except Newport who did not testify) denies both any recollection of the specific alleged statements, and of the fact sought to be proved by the hearsay statement. But the hearsay rule serves another more important purpose. It requires the person asserting a fact to be present in the courtroom, and to subject himself to the best method yet devised for a determination of the truth of a fact; cross-examination. There are many exceptions taking hearsay evidence out of the general rule of inadmissibility. We will discuss the general exceptions as they relate to each conversation individually. Conversation Number 1: Ragland’s alleged statements were in part a narrative of past events and in part double hearsay. In either case it was necessary in view of the fact that Ragland did not himself testify about the declarations of the alleged co-conspirators that his alleged statements came within some exception to the hearsay rule. A number of theories exist under which the alleged statements of Ragland might have been offered against the defendant Flintkote, as exceptions to the hearsay rule: (1) As an admission of a party’s authorized agent; (2) as a statement of a co-conspirator; (3) as a statement made .as part of the res gestae. Here it should be kept in mind that the evidence was never offered against the declarant Ragland individually, for he was not a party to the action. Evidence of a hearsay statement is admissible against a party to the action if the judge finds: (a) the declarant was authorized by the party to make a statement for him concerning the subject matter of the statement; or (b) the party, with knowledge of the content of the statement by words or conduct manifested his adoption or approval of the statement or his belief in its truth. Here there was no attempt to prove that Flintkote adopted or approved of Ragland’s statement as to what Krause, Howard and Newport had said, as to alleged threats. Hence plaintiff was left with the possibility of showing that Ragr land had authority to make alleged statements purporting to establish the threats. No evidence was offered to establish direct written or oral authority. Plainly, counsel relied on an implied or inferred authority from Flintkote to Ragland, to make the statements described by Waldron and Lysfjord. Technically, we believe such a reliance takes the hearsay declaration out of the “authorized declaration” class of exception to the hearsay rule, into the “vicarious admission” rule. That rule has been expressed as follows: “Evidence of a hearsay declaration is admissible against a party to the action if the judge finds (a) the declaration concerned a matter within the scope of an agency or employment of the declarant for the party and was made before the termination of the agency or employment, or (b) the party and the declarant were participants in a plan to commit * * a civil wrong, and the hearsay declaration was material to the plan or its subject matter and was made while the plan was in existence and before its execution was complete * * ” Subdivision (b) presents no very difficult problem. The alleged conspiracy did not, either as pleaded, or as the ease was tried, attempt to charge or make Flintkote’s employee, Ragland, a member of the alleged conspiracy, or a “participant” who “planned” to commit a civil wrong. Subdivision (b) is really an extension of the usual rules applicable to conspiracies, and the admissibility of admissions made by a co-conspirator. We think Wigmore hits the nail on the head when he observes that our problem is one of the law of agency, not of the law of evidence. “He who sets another person to do an act in his stead as agent is chargeable in substantive law by such acts as are done under that authority; so too, properly enough, admissions made by an agent in the course of exercizing that authority have the same testimonial value to discredit the party’s present claim as if stated by the party himself. “The question therefore turns upon the scope of the authority. This question, frequently enough a difficult one depends upon the doctrine of Agency applied to the circumstances of the case, and not upon any rule of evidence.” (Emphasis added.) IV Wigmore on Evidence 3rd Ed., § 1078. Let us examine the record to see what was Ragland’s capacity with Flintkote. Ragland left the employ of the Flintkote Company on April 1, 1955. He had started that employment February 1, 1951. He had started as a field service engineer, “to promote the general line of insulation board products, which had no connection with acoustical tile.” On June 1st, 1951, he “was given the job of sales promotion for acoustical tile, in which position he remained.” Ragland had worked with the two plaintiffs previously, and was friendly with them. They met socially on frequent occasions, and Ragland wanted to help them become representatives of Flintkote, if he could. Ragland, as “promotional salesman,” worked under an assistant sales-manager, of the Southwest Division, of the Pioneer Division, of The Flintkote Company, a Mr. Browning Baymiller. Bay-miller’s immediate superior was a Mr. E. F. Thompson, Sales Manager. Thompson’s immediate superior was Mr. Frank S. Harkins, who “had charge of all activities of the building material division.” The determination of whether or not Flintkote was to contract with the plaintiffs was passed “upwards” seriatim by Ragland to Baymiller to Thompson to Harkins. Ragland had no executive duties for the corporate defendant, but was a representative at the lower echelon. There was an utter lack of proof of or any questioning seeking to establish Rag-land’s authority to speak on behalf of Flintkote, concerning the alleged incriminating statements of Krause, Howard, and Newport, threatening Flintkote with a boycott. We must yet consider the admissibility of such hearsay statements under the res gestae exception. Wigmore has this to say: “In two departments of substantive law this use of ‘res gestae’ has been very common, namely in the law determining liability for the acts of an agent and for the acts of a co-conspirator. The acts and admissions of an agent are available to charge the principal when they occurred in the course of his employment ; and of a co-conspirator, when they occurred in the duration of the conspiracy. It is often attempted to designate this course of action, which thus limits the range of chargeable acts as ‘res gestae.’ But the scope of it is to be ascertained wholly from the substantive law on those topics, not from any rule of evidence.” VI Wigmore on Evidence 3rd Ed., § 1769. “The phrase ‘res gestae’ has long been not only entirely useless, but even positively harmful. It is useless, because every rule of Evidence to which it has ever been applied exists as a part of some other well established principle and can be explained in terms of that principle. It is harmful * * * (and) ought therefore wholly to be repudiated, as a vicious element in our legal phraseology.” VI Wigmore on Evidence, p. 182. We conclude that if the alleged admission in Conversation Number 1 is not admissible as a statement of a co-conspirator or of a party’s authorized agent, it is not admissible under any theory; i. e., it does not fall within the legitimate and accepted res gestae exceptions of Spontaneous Exclamations, Verbal Acts, or Statements of a Mental Condition. VI Wigmore on Evidence, 3rd Ed., § 1768. We cannot pass on whom the jury could, or should believe, but we have the duty of seeing that any evidence, ordinarily inadmissible as hearsay, is admitted into evidence for the jury to consider only when a proper foundation for its admission has been laid. The discussion of both counsel throughout the trial recognized the responsibility resting in the trial court. The trial court recognized it. But when this complicated case went to trial (without the usual pre-trial conferences), the court was pressed for immediate answers on involved procedural and evidentiary points. We conclude the court erred (a) in permitting the introduction of this hearsay evidence (Conversation Number 1, supra) without any foundation showing the extent and scope of the authority resting in the employee Ragland, if any, to act for and bind the corporate defendant; and (b) in refusing to grant the defendant’s motion to strike, made at the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ case, relating to the same “vicarious admissions” allegedly made by the witness Ragland. What was the effect of the erroneous admission of this evidence? Here we have testimony introduced which goes to the very heart of plaintiffs’ cause of action and to defendant’s defense. Why did Flintkote terminate the contract? No reason was placed in writing. The only evidence (other than the bare refusal to sell, which was equivocal) were the conversations. Of these a reading of the record persuasively demonstrates that Ragland’s alleged statements were by far the most significant and the most damaging to defendant’s cause. They spelled out in clear perspective the nature of the conspiracy and brought the events home to the jury with the dramatic and incisive impact that only admissions can produce. This was defendant’s own former employee outlining the unlawful scheme. The full effect of this evidence on the jurors’ minds cannot be measured with precision. To deny that it influenced the jury’s verdict in a material manner is to ignore reality. What the verdict would have been had this evidence not been introduced is not certain. Moreover, it is not our function to decide a hypothetical case. We must rule only on the basis of what actually transpired in the court below and under the circumstances here presented we hold that the admission of Ragland’s statement constituted prejudicial error. Conversation Number 2: The statement attributed to Baymiller (Conversation Number 2, supra) again tenders the question of agency. Baymiller may or may not have been an executive officer of defendant company, authorized to bind that company by his statements. He was Rag-land’s immediate superior. His position, and his activity in connection with the subject matter of this action justified the admission of his alleged statement for whatever probative value it may have had, provided that a proper foundation had been laid. We need not pass upon that issue here; nor upon the question of what the jury might have decided if this testimony was properly admitted, and the inadmissible Conversation Number 1 excluded. Conversation Number S: Conversation Number 3 involves no question of agency, for Krause was neither agent, servant nor employee of the defendant Flintkote. Krause was named as a co-conspirator in the amended complaint, [fl 10, Tr. 20.] Thus if plaintiff had made a prima facie showing that there was a conspiracy and that Flintkote had joined the conspiracy, then the statements made by a co-conspirator, if made during the existence of the conspiracy, and in execution of the common design, were admissible against all conspirators. Schine Chain Theatres v. United States, 334 U.S. 110, 117, 68 S.Ct. 947, 92 L.Ed. 1245; United States v. United States Gypsum Co., 333 U.S. 364, 393, 68 S.Ct. 525, 92 L.Ed. 746. This conversation was introduced for the purpose of establishing that the act of termination was not equivocal, that it was an act in furtherance of the conspiracy, and that Flintkote had joined in that conspiracy. Excluding the evidence improperly introduced, no sufficient basis for the introduction of Conversation Number 3 was proved. Thus the foundation required to make the evidence admissible could only be established by the evidence itself. While much latitude is allowed in the order of proof establishing a conspiracy (as we have hereinabove discussed) the proponent of the evidence must still lay a proper foundation. It may seem anomalous that the proponent must establish the existence of the conspiracy by independent evidence before statements of alleged co-conspirators showing the existence and operations of the conspiracy is admissible. A cynic might observe that the law requires that the body be buried before the coffin is nailed. But the law has its reasons. The only conceivable basis upon which the admission of such unsworn and damaging evidence can be justified—the parties acted in concert and each authorized or approved the other’s actions—intrinsically necessitates an independent showing of the conspiracy. If the rule were otherwise, persons would go to jail or be held liable in damages solely on hearsay evidence which they had no opportunity to impeach or refute. There is a further reason why, under the record as it existed before the trial court, and the manner and theory under which the case was tried, this Conversation Number 3 was inadmissible. The court had previously ruled (and we do not here pass upon the merits of that ruling) that the refusal of Flintkote to deal further with plaintiffs on February 19, 1952, marked the termination of the conspiracy. If that be true, the statements of Krause were inadmissible against Flintkote, the alleged co-conspirator. Third: Alleged Errors in Instructions, Other Than Damages. We next consider the defendant’s third ground of alleged error, relating to instructions. Specification 12, alleged error in instructions respecting damages, will be considered later. There remains specification of alleged errors (Appellant’s Points 5 to 10 inclusive) in instructions with regard to: Flintkote’s participation in the conspiracy; reasonableness of restraint of trade; conflicting instructions on injury to public; refusal to give defendant’s instructions 24, 25, and 33; error in refusal of defendant’s instructions on burden of proof (Defendant’s 14 and 42). We have heretofore pointed out that the plaintiffs’ instructions in this case were prepared for a trial against all named defendants, including those dismissed out prior to trial, and that counsel for both parties and the court had agreed that they should be re-cast. Unfortunately, such re-casting did not take place in every instruction. The court did carefully and properly instruct the jury: “ * * * but there is only one defendant here. This complaint * * * was filed against many defendants. What has happened in this case with respect to the others is not of any concern to you. We are trying the case here today as to this one defendant.” [Tr. 1239] The court further charged that: “The Flintkote Company can be liable for refusing to sell acoustical tile to plaintiffs only if such refusal to sell was in furtherance of and as a consequence of a knowing participation in an unlawful combination or conspiracy.” In other words, we come back to the old principle that if the Flintkote Company was acting entirely on its own, without conspiracy with the other defendants, then there is no cause of action.” [Tr. 1247] [See also, Tr. 1252] This charge was essentially correct. But the jury was also instructed as follows: “ * * * However, the case here is one in which The Flintkote Company is accused of being a member of a conspiracy. The Flintkote Company or anyone else engaged in private enterprise may select its own customers, and in the absence of an illegal contract, combination or conspiracy may sell or refuse to sell to any person, including these plaintiffs, for any cause or for no cause whatever. But under the antitrust laws it cannot do so if there has been a conspiracy.” [Tr. 1236] [Emphasis added] Without interpretation this is an inaccurate expression of the law. It permits a recovery against a defendant who refuses to deal “if there has been a conspiracy;” irrespective of whether or not the defendant then sought to be held participated therein. Plaintiffs can only urge that it might be inferred that because of the first sentence (de-emphasized in Appellant’s Brief), there was impliedly added to the last sentence the words: “in which Flintkote participated.” The confusion thus created was compounded by another instruction: “If you are satisfied from all the evidence that any two or moire of the defendants acted together for the purpose and with the effect of eliminating the competition in the purchase, sale or installation of acoustical tile, then you may return a verdict against the defendants and in favor of the plaintiffs, provided the evidence actually shows preponderantly that plaintiffs were damaged by such acts and conduct.” [Tr. 1245, 1246.] Here the jury was authorized to return a verdict against the defendant irrespective of whether or not the defendant ever participated in the conspiracy! This goes to the heart of the defendant’s theory of defense. Finally, the jury was instructed that if they found certain essential facts existed, then “ * * * your verdict should be in favor of plaintiffs as to each defendant whom you find to have knowingly participated therein.” [Tr. 1245.] And again, if they were satisfied that certain acts took place, “ * * * then you may return a verdict against the defendants.” [Tr. 1245.] The given instructions were misleading and contradictory. They did not help the jury return a careful and thoughtful verdict. The instructions were not correct, and should not have been submitted nor read. However, defendant admits that no objection was made to these instructions at the time they were given, [Tr. 1257-1261] or before the jury retired. There thus exists the question as to whether defendant can take advantage, on this appeal, of the alleged error. Rule 51, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. We recognize the fact that trial lawyers in some respects act at their peril, in requesting a revision of an instruction once it has been given to a jury. It may be unduly emphasized in the jury’s mind. Nevertheless, if the instruction is erroneous, objection must be made, and as the rule says, “stating distinctly the matter to which he objects and the grounds of his objection.” When a party fails to do this, he runs the risk that despite the error, he may be held to have waived it. Because of other prejudicial error, to which exception was properly taken, we need not here pause to re-consider the question of whether “plain error” in the giving of misleading instructions may be reviewed where no proper objection or exception was made at the trial. Neither was any specific objection made to the court’s failure to give certain instructions requested by the defendant, (No. 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32 and 33). The court admittedly gave the substance of some of these. The trial court has a broad discretion in the emphasis it may direct to any legal position, or whether, after having spoken on the subject, it need or need not repeat the proposition in varying ways, as proposed by respective counsel. We believe the court clearly tried to fairly present both plaintiffs’ and defendant’s legal theories to the jury; and we hold that on this aspect of the case, he did so. As to burden of proof, we agree with the trial court that many instructions were offered, that he selected one, and “did not wish,” nor was he required, to repeat. No error was committed thereby. Fourth: Alleged Error in Refusing to Grant a New Trial; in Instructions Relative to Damages; in Fixing Attorney’s Fees; and in Crediting the $20,000 Payment. We now turn to defendant’s fourth contention, concerning damages. Here there is no question but that the defendant objected, and took exception, to the theory of damages which went to the jury, and which governed the court’s action thereafter. Appellant contends that numerous errors were committed in respect to the ultimate amount of the judgment. Specifically, appellant asserts (A) the jury verdict was grossly excessive; (B) damages were awarded for a period of time beyond the permissible period; (C) the District Judge erred in determining the legal effect of the covenant not to sue executed between appellees and others; and (D) the attorney’s fees granted below and those sought on appeal are excessive. We will consider these points in order. A. Excessive Damages. At the outset appellees question this Court’s power to review the denial of a new trial on the grounds of excessive damages. Regardless of what the rule may be in other circuits, this Court has repeatedly affirmed its authority to review such a denial. Cobb v. Lepisto, 9 Cir., 6 F.2d 128; Dept. of Water & Power of City of Los Angeles v. Anderson, 9 Cir., 95 F.2d 577, certiorari denied 305 U.S. 607, 59 S.Ct. 67, 83 L.Ed 386; Southern Pacific Co. v. Guthrie, 9 Cir., 180 F.2d 295; Id., 9 Cir., 186 F.2d 926, certiorari denied 341 U.S. 904, 71 S.Ct. 614, 95 L.Ed. 1343. And it may reverse the lower court’s decision if it finds the verdict grossly excessive or monstrous. Southern Pacific Co. v. Guthrie, 9 Cir., 186 F.2d 295. Stated differently, however, appellant’s contentions in the instant case actually challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury verdict, a question of law, and one which this Court or any appellate court of ordinary jurisdiction has undoubted power to decide. Appellees here sought damages for three separate and distinct kinds of injury to their business: (1) Out-of-pocket expenses incurred in establishing a business in San Bernardino. These expenses consisted of sums expended for building rental, promotion and advertising, and trucking and utilities. Without dispute, they totaled $1,920.00. If we assume liability proven, the evidence supports without question an award as to this amount. (2) Out-of-pocket expenses resulting from the increased cost of acoustical tile caused by appellees’ inability to pui-chase their supplies from Flintkote. Appellees introduced evidence tending to show that during the period from January 1, 1952 to May 3, 1955, they paid $87,808.97 for acoustical tile obtained from persons other than Flintkote and that this represented an excess of $12,758.57 over that sum which Flintkote would have charged them for the equivalent quantity. The evidence on this point was conflicting and although it appears possible that some of the items included in the computation ■of the aggregate amount actually paid were not properly allocable to acoustical tile, that was a question for the jury’s determination; Excepting the question as to the validity of the time period for which damages were laere allowed, which we will later come to, no error appears in the record as to this theory of damages. (3) Loss-of-profits which appellees would’ have realized had they been able to acquire acoustical tile from Flintkote on a direct basis. The total possible damages sustained under items (1) and ’(2) is ’$14,678.57. Thus it is obvious that most of the award was based on loss-of-profits, and it is here that the evidence is frailest. Initially, it should be noted that damages for all three kinds of injury alleged in the instant case are recoverable in the same action, if supported by competent evidence, and not all nor any two aré necessarily mutually exclusive.' Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co., 282 U.S. 555, 51 S.Ct. 248, 75 L.Ed. 544. • Turning to the issue of lost profits, the sole evidence adduced relative thereto was the oral testimony of the plaintiffs and their accountant, as supplemented by written computations. [Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 38 and 39.] An analysis of the qualifications of the witnesses as well as the testimony is essential .to an understanding of the problem which confronts us. Mr. Lysfjord testified that prior to the formation of the aabeta company, he had worked twelve years in the acoustical tile industry, which were evenly divided between installing and selling, the last five of which were spent as a salesman for the R. W. Downer Co. He stated that he “never concerned” himself with the financial position of that company and “had nothing whatever to do with the purchasing of materials” for it. In short, his activities were restricted to the sales facet of this business. He evidently was thoroughly acquainted with this part of the business, but it is apparent from his own testimony that he knew little, if anything, about the myriad problems entailed in the proprietary and managerial operations of an acoustical tile business. That Mr. Lysfjord was an able and experienced salesman is not disputed. That is one thing. That this record qualifies him as an expert on business prognosis is quite another matter. His testimony bespeaks of great optimism, predicated not so much on economic reality as on his personal philosophy and enthusiasm. “I can’t see any reason in my mind that I shouldn’t be able to do as well for myself as working for somebody else. I surely would work as hard or probably twice as hard for myself as for anybody else.” [Tr. 628.] His partner, Mr. Waldron, demonstrated the same fervent hopes. His experience, too, had been confined to work as an applicator and then as a salesman before he embarked on this venture. Further, he admitted that he had had no previous experience in operating or owning any business; that in regard to his work at the R. W. Downer Co., he had never acquired any knowledge of its working capital or financial structure and, indeed, had never even examined its books. Despite this patent lack of business background, he testified that he fully anticipated annual profit increases, justifying his assumption on “Just normal expected increase in good will and sales, promotional work, * * *” [Tr. 711.] The accountant, Mr. Frank Hamiel, merely performed the mechanical function of computing the figures given him by plaintiffs. What, then, were plaintiffs’ estimates and upon what factual basis were they grounded? In essence, the computation of lost profits was based on the assumption that the plaintiffs would make as much working for themselves in their first year of operation as they and their employer, R. W. Downer Co., made together from their sales in their best year working for that going concern; that thereafter, profits would increase as much as 50% annually. In other words, they thought that they could have sold a carload of acoustical tile per month in 1952; one and one-half carloads per month in 1953; and two carloads per month in 1954. The gross sales price of a carload was estimated at $18,000, with a 20% net profit or $3600 per carload. The 20% profit factor was derived from adding plaintiffs’ 10% commissions to the 10% profit made by the Downer Co. on their sales. Thus, the total net profit for each partner was approximated at $21,600 in 1952; $32,-400 in 1953; and $43,200 in 1954, for a cumulative total of $97,200 each, from which actual earnings were deducted to leave a net loss of anticipated profits of $75,788.50. It was also shown that plaintiffs actually made a net profit of 5% of gross sales in 1952; 11% in 1953; and 5% in 1954. (This variance alone is of peculiar significance to the soundness of plaintiffs’ theory of damages.) The foregoing represents the sum and substance of plaintiffs’ evidence on this issue. The omissions are manifold and significant. Nowhere in the record is there any substantial evidence of the state of the industry during this three year period. There is no evidence that plaintiffs would probably have obtained more business if they could have purchased Flintkote tile on a direct basis in that no showing is made of the existence or availability of such business or plaintiffs’ ability to undertake additional work. We know only that business was “very competitive” and that plaintiffs encountered difficulty in disposing of the one and one-half carloads of Flintkote tile which had been supplied them. Financially, plaintiffs went into business with a relatively small capital investment ($6,000), with hopes of increasing their capital account by plowing profits back into the enterprise. A study of the adjudicated cases in this area readily dispels any impression that this question of damages is governed by an application of the common law rule of reasonable certainty. The cases have long since departed from this rule in antitrust litigation. Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson, supra, 282 U.S. at page 565, 51 S.Ct. 248. Just how far they have gone in imposing the risk of uncertainty on defendants we must now consider. Preliminarily, it should foe observed that the reasons underlying the evolutionary trend toward liberality in proving damages are grounded in logic and sound policy. Two principal factors have influenced the courts. First, the self-evident intangible nature of the subject matter. To ascertain what would have been is as difficult as trying to determine what should be. In the cryptic words of Judge Wyzanski, in a private antitrust action, “You can’t go to a book and look for the answer.” Cape Cod Food Products v. National Cranberry Ass’n, D.C., 119 F.Supp. 900, 910. Second, the legal maxim that a wrongdoer should not profit by his wrong. In light of the intrinsic uncertainty surrounding this problem, the responsibility for which lies in large measure with the defendant found liable, it has long been felt that this presents an ideal situation for application of that doctrine. As stated by the Supreme Court, “ * * * a defendant whose wrongful conduct has rendered difficult the ascertainment of the precise damages suffered by the plaintiff, is not entitled to complain that they cannot be measured with the same exactness and precision as would otherwise be possible.” Eastman Kodak Co. of New York v. Southern Photo Material Co., 273 U.S. 359, 379, 47 S.Ct. 400, 405, 71 L.Ed. 684. Cf. Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co., supra, 282 U.S. at page 563, 51 S.Ct. 248; Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 327 U.S. 251, 264-265, 66 S.Ct. 574, 90 L.Ed. 652. It is in this setting that the modern rule has developed. We take it that the controlling rule today in seeking damages for loss of profits in antitrust cases is that the plaintiff is required to establish with reasonable probability the existence of some causal connection between defendant’s wrongful act and some loss of anticipated revenue. Once that has been accomplished, the jury will be permitted to “make a just and reasonable estimate of the damage based on relevant data, and render its verdict accordingly.” Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., supra, 327 U.S. at page 264, 66 S.Ct. at page 580. The cases have drawn a distinction between the quantum o