America’s Pastime of a Time Past: Baseball has lost its special place in the American courts, but why? (Part 1 of 2)

by Kamran Chaudri October 30 2006, 19:11

I. Introduction

Baseball has enjoyed a special place in the hearts of American sports fans.  It is touted as America’s pastime.  As Americans, judges are not immune to either the love of the game or the special status it holds in American culture.  While other sports faced antitrust regulation with respect to the reserve clause, baseball was exempted by the courts. [1]  The reserve clause restricts the right of the player to contract with a team other than the one he is currently signed with.[2]  Justice Blackmun, in his famous opinion in Flood v. Kuhn, pays homage to the baseball gods with a nearly seven-page-long introductory section entitled “The Game.”[3]  This storied past of baseball (MLB) no longer holds sway as recent rulings evidence.  Specifically, in the CBC v. MLB Advanced Media, a federal district court recently held that MLB did not have rights over player names and statistics so as to require fantasy baseball leagues to purchase such rights from MLB.[4]   

II. Analysis

The first part of this article addresses the treatment courts have given to baseball in the past and present.  A thorough analysis of baseball case law is beyond the scope of this article; as such, a brief history of seminal cases is presented.  The second part, to be published on November 27, 2006, will hypothesize why MLB has lost the preferential treatment it once received.

Baseball received special treatment in the past but does not so currently. In the past, as evidenced by a set of three cases culminating in Justice Blackmun’s ode to baseball in Flood v. Kuhn, baseball was exempted from antitrust regulation as to the reserve clause while other sports were not [5] because baseball was held not to be interstate commerce in the pivotal case Federal Baseball.[6]  More recently, as demonstrated by CBC v. MLB Advanced Media,[7] baseball has found itself on the short-end of potentially pivotal legal holdings.[8]

A. The legal precedent set by the trilogy of Federal Baseball, Toolson, and Flood demonstrates baseball’s once special place in the law. 

Federal Baseball Club of Baltimore v. National League of Professional Baseball Clubs is the seminal case in which the Supreme Court created MLB’s exemption from the Sherman Antitrust Act (the Act).  The Act, which prohibits the restraint of trade, applies only to interstate commerce.[9]  The court held that baseball was not interstate commerce; as such, the Act did not apply.[10] 
In 1922 when Federal Baseball was decided, interstate commerce had a narrower definition which would later be expanded.[11]  Even under this expanded definition, in 1953 the Supreme Court upheld the exemption.[12]  The Court held favorably for baseball based on respect for the prior decision in Federal Baseball, the 30-year gap during which baseball expanded and thrived on the exception, and Congress’ failure to change the law.[13]  The Court made this decision without addressing the key issue in Federal Baseball: whether baseball is interstate commerce.[14]  Flood at 275.  The Court also pointed to expert opinion that stated baseball would fail in the chaos that would follow if antitrust regulation was applied to it.[15]  Thus, the Court chose to protect baseball. 

Other sports, although arguing that they too should be exempted because they were not interstate commerce, were held to be subject to the Antitrust Act.[16]  The Supreme Court limited the exemption only to baseball. 

In Flood in 1972, the Supreme Court finally held that baseball was clearly within the definition of interstate commerce, but for the same reasons as in Toolson, the Court continued to exempt baseball from federal antitrust law.[17]  An uncited reason may be that American judges once again protected America’s pastime.  The Court did consider expert opinion stating that baseball would be ruined if the reserve clause was prohibited.[18]

In the time after Flood, the players’ association, the baseball players union, finally escaped the oppressive trappings of the reserve clause through contractual negotiations.[19]  Struggles in the negotiations over the reserve clause were in fact a substantial cause of the player’s strike in 1994.[20]  As a result of the eventual success of these negotiations, Congress drafted legislation that curtailed the special treatment baseball received by finally passing the Curt Flood Act, named in honor of the lead plaintiff in Flood v. Kuhn.[21]   

B.  The legal battle that is CBC v. MLB Advanced Media is an indication of the long forgotten traditional place of baseball in American culture. 

In the recent case of CBC Distribution and Marketing v. MLB Advanced Media, CBC, a company operating an internet fantasy baseball league for profit, asked for a declaration from the courts that player names and statistics were not excludible.[22]  CBC had been paying for licensing rights to the player information, but MLB Advanced Media, the internet marketing arm of MLB, did not extend the offer when the license ran its course in 2005.[23]  Player statistics are the fundamental basis of the fantasy league competition; without statistics, there is no competition.  As such, prohibition of the use of the player names and statistics would prevent CBC from conducting its fantasy baseball league business.  The court held, based on both the state right of publicity laws and federal copyright laws, that the information could not be excluded from use publicly.[24] 

First, under state law, the court held that player names and statistics do not cause confusion so as to mislead customers that the players themselves are in fact approving and endorsing CBC’s activities.[25]  Second, under copyright law, the court held that player names and statistics are a non-unique compilation of fact and are news of the day in the public domain that cannot be copyrighted.[26]  This ruling does not only hurt MLB’s bottom line, it sets a precedent that may affect all other professional sporting leagues, which are watching this case closely.[27]  MLB may appeal this decision, but it is unlikely that MLB would succeed.[28] 

III. Moving Forward

This ruling is merely one sign of the love lost between baseball and the public. The public may have lost its love because of the sky rocketing player salaries; the reports of unsportsman-like conduct such as poor attitude, steroid use, or other off-the-field conduct; or union hold-outs.  It is not one of these factors alone, but all combined that have made it apparent to the public that baseball is not just a sport, a pastime as it were, but instead big business out for profit.  The courts have reflected this change in public opinion.

 
 

[1] See Flood v. Kuhn, 407 U.S. 258 (1972)(discussing the history of case law that created baseball's exemption from federal antritrust law). 

[2] Peter M. Macaluso, Note, Bang the Gavel Slowly: A Call for Judicial Activism following the Curt Flood Act, 9 B.U. Pub. Int. L.J. 463, 467 (2000).

[3] Flood, supra note 1 at 260-67.

[4] CBC Dist. & Marketing, Inc. v. MLB Advanded Media, 443 F.Supp.2d 1077, 1107 (E.D. Mo. 2006).

[5] Flood, supra note 1 at 276-277 (comparing the treatment of boxing, which was subject to federal antitrust regulation, to the treatment of baseball). 

[6] Federal Baseball Club of Baltimore v. National League of Professional Baseball Clubs, 259 U.S. 200, 201-06 (1922).

[7] Flood, supra note 1. 

[8] Michael McCarthy, USA Today, Fantasy Leagues can use baseball stats (August 9, 2006) http://www.usatoday.com/sports/baseball/2006-08-08-fantasy-statistics_x.htm?POE=SPOISVA&POE=click-refer.

[9] Macaluso, supra note 2 at 464-65.

[10] Id. at 466.

[11] Id. at 467.

[12] Toolson v. NY Yankees, Inc., 346 U.S. 356, 357 (1972).

[13] Flood, supra note 1 at 273-74.

[14] Id. at 275.

[15] Id. at 274.

[16] Id. at 276-77.

[17] Id. at 282-87.

[18] Id. at 274.

[19] Macaluso, supra note 2 at 476-77.

[20] Id.

[21] Id.

[22] CBC, supra note 4 at 1081-82.

[23] Id. at 1081.

[24] Id. at 1107.

[25] Id.

[26] Id.

[27] McCarthy, USA Today, supra note 8.

[28] Jeff Douglas, AP, Fantasy Leagues allowed to use MLB stats (August 8, 2006) http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory?id=2289040.

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