Printer Friendly
The Free Library
18,914,692 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Threading The American Needle: Required Cooperation In Producing Football Games Provides NFL Teams With A Free Pass On Antitrust Scrutiny Of Their Collective Licensing Efforts.


The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has held that the National Football League is a single entity for purposes of licensing team trademarks, thus freeing the NFL's licensing decisions from Sherman Act s. 1's prohibition against group conduct that unreasonably restrains trade. American Needle Inc. v. NFL, No. 07-4006 (7th Cir. Aug. 18, 2008). The court also held that Sherman Act s. 2's prohibition against unilateral conduct establishing or maintaining a monopoly did not constrain the NFL's decision to grant an exclusive license for team apparel.

American Needle Inc. was a long-time NFL licensee, selling hats embellished with team logos. In 2000, the NFL teams collectively authorized NFL Properties, LLC, a separate corporation charged with licensing and marketing the team-owned trademarks and logos, to solicit bids from vendors on an exclusive headwear license. In 2001, NFL Properties awarded Reebok, the high bidder, a 10-year exclusive license and did not renew other headwear licenses, including American Needle's.

American Needle sued the league, its individual teams, NFL Properties, and Reebok. It alleged that because the exclusive license agreement with Reebok prevented other vendors from obtaining license rights, the agreement restrained trade unreasonably in violation of Sherman Act s. 1. American Needle also claimed that the NFL teams had monopolized markets for NFL team licensing and product wholesaling in violation of Sherman Act s. 2 when they authorized NFL Properties to grant an exclusive license. The district court, relying on the doctrine of Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., 467 U.S. 752 (1984), which provides that corporations and their wholly-owned subsidiaries are single actors for Sherman Act purposes, granted the NFL defendants summary judgment, holding that for producing and promoting NFL football games, the league, its teams, and its licensing agent, NFL Properties, were a single economic entity for Sherman Act purposes.

On appeal American Needle argued that Copperweld's single-entity doctrine should not apply to the NFL, its teams, and NFL Properties because, unlike a corporation and its wholly-owned subsidiary, each was a separate economic actor with the individual ability to license its intellectual property. As potential competitors in a market for granting these licenses -- for example, the Jets might compete against the Packers in awarding a hat manufacturer a logo license -- the teams, argued American Needle, could not be considered unified in economic interest.

The court of appeals agreed that the single entity analysis requires a court to "examine whether the conduct in question deprives the marketplace of the independent sources of economic power that competition assumes." Id. at 14. But the court was not persuaded that the teams' ability to compete against each other in offering individual licenses required finding the teams to be separate economic actors for Sherman Act purposes. Instead, the court started with the premise that the teams could only produce "NFL Football" through joint conduct: "Certainly the NFL teams can function only as one source of economic power when collectively producing NFL football." Id. at 15. Because combined action is necessary to produce games, the court reasoned "that only one source of economic power controls the promotion of NFL football; it makes little sense to assert that each individual team has the authority, if not the responsibility, to promote the jointly produced NFL football." Id. at 15-16. The court found support for this view in the uncontradicted evidence submitted by the NFL that the league competes with other forms of entertainment and that the teams had collectively licensed their intellectual property since 1963, when they formed NFL Properties to conduct and engage in advertising campaigns and promotional ventures on their behalf. Nothing in Sherman Act s. 1, the court announced, "prohibits the NFL teams from cooperating so the league can compete against other entertainment providers." Id. at 17. The need to compete for consumer entertainment spending, the court concluded, transforms the several individual teams into a single economic entity whose internal agreements are immune from regulation by Sherman Act s. 1:

Simply put, nothing in s. 1 prohibits the NFL teams from cooperating so the league can compete against other entertainment providers. Indeed, antitrust law encourages cooperation inside a business organization -- such as, in this case, a professional sports league -- to foster competition between that organization and its competitors. Viewed in this light, the NFL teams are best described as a single source of economic power when promoting NFL football through licensing the teams' intellectual property, and we thus cannot say that the district court was wrong to so

conclude. Id. (citations omitted).

Turning to American Needle's s. 2 claim, the court reasoned that, as a single entity, the NFL and its teams could grant exclusive licenses without risking Sherman Act s. 2 liability: "As a single entity for the purpose of licensing, the NFL teams are free under s. 2 to license their intellectual property on an exclusive basis, even if the teams opt to reduce the number of companies to whom they grant licenses." Id. (citations omitted).

While the court acknowledged its earlier view that whether a professional sports league should be treated as a single entity "should be addressed not only 'one league at a time,' but also 'one facet of a league at a time,'" Id. at 12-13 (quoting Chicago Prof'l Sports Ltd. v. NBA, 95 F.3d 593, 600 (7th Cir. 1996) (Easterbrook, J.)), American Needle suggests broadly that a sports league's common economic interest in producing league games supports treating the league and its component teams as a single economic entity at least for the purpose of intellectual property licensing. Other courts construing different factual circumstances and other panels of the Seventh Circuit, have arguably not extended the single entity doctrine so far. Compare Fraser v. Major League Soccer, LLC, 284 F.3d 47, 55-56 (1st Cir. 2002) (rejecting the view that sports leagues should be treated as a single entity because teams must cooperate to produce product and noting that "[s]ingle entity status for ordinarily organized leagues has been rejected in several other circuits as well"); and Chicago Prof'l Sports, 95 F.3d at 597-600 (suggesting the NBA is not a single entity for all purposes). Only time will tell whether American Needle's holding will fully immunize other leagues' joint licensing and promotional conduct from antitrust scrutiny.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mr G. Halfenger

Foley & Lardner

777 East Wisconsin Ave

WI 53202

Milwaukee

UNITED STATES

Tel: 3128324734

Fax: 3128324700

E-mail: jbrumbaugh@foley.com

URL: www.foley.com

Click Here for related articles

(c) Mondaq Ltd, 2008 - Tel. +44 (0)20 8544 8300 - http://www.mondaq.com

COPYRIGHT 2008 Mondaq Ltd.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:National Football League
Author:Halfenger, G.
Publication:Mondaq Business Briefing
Date:Sep 1, 2008
Words:1113
Previous Article:Recent Delaware Court Rulings Highlight Need For Review Of Director Indemnification Arrangements.(Delaware. Court of Chancery)
Next Article:Is Poker A Game Of Chance? The Australian Position.
Topics:



Related Articles
NFL flag: making dreams a reality. (football recreation program for children)(Promoting Healthy Lifestyles)(Cover Story)
United we stand: the anti-competitive implications of media ownership of athletic teams in Great Britain.
TOP COURT STRIPS UNIONS OF ANTITRUST WEAPON.(NEWS)
Clarett Scores Antitrust Touchdown: Clears Path to NFL.
'SPYGATE' TALK LINGERS.(Sports)
Pro Football's NFL ? the Largest American Pro Football League Has Significant Rivalries
Fan Centered Football
2008 NFL Football Schedule

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles