TOOLSON v. NEW YORK YANKEES, INC. ET AL.
No. 18
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
346 U.S. 356; 74 S. Ct. 78; 98 L. Ed. 64; 1953 U.S. LEXIS 2680; 1953 Trade Cas. (CCH)
P67,602
October 13, 1953, Argued
November 9, 1953, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY:
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT. *
* Together with No. 23, Kowalski v. Chandler, Commissioner of Baseball, et al., argued
October 13-14, 1953, and No. 25, Corbett et al. v. Chandler, Commissioner of Baseball, et
al., argued October 14, 1953, both on certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for
the Sixth Circuit.
DISPOSITION: 200 F.2d 198, 202 F.2d 413, 428, affirmed.
CASE HISTORY: Plaintiff brings this action under the provisions of the Sherman Act,
26 Stat. 209, 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1 and 2, and the Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 731, 15 U.S.C.A. §
15. He alleges that he was, and now is, a professional baseball player and that as a
result of the alleged monopoly, to which all defendants are allegedly party, he has been
deprived of his livelihood. Plaintiff was under contract with the Newark International
Baseball Club, Inc., which club assigned his contract to the Binghamton Exhibition
Company, Inc. As a result of plaintiff's refusal to report to the latter club, and
pursuant to the provisions of his contract with the Newark team and the regulations which
govern the structure of 'Organized Baseball' in general, he was placed on the
'ineligible list' of the Binghamton team, and, defendants, because of this, have refused
and still do refuse to allow plaintiff to play professional baseball. [101 F. Supp. 93;
1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1975]
JUDGES: Vinson, Warren, Black, Reed, Frankfurter, Douglas, Jackson, Burton, Clark
and Minton.
OPINION:
In Federal Baseball Club of Baltimore v. National League of Professional
Baseball Clubs, 259 U.S. 200 (1922), this Court held that the business of providing
public baseball games for profit between clubs of professional baseball players was not
within the scope of the federal antitrust laws. Congress has had the ruling under
consideration but has not seen fit to bring such business under these laws by legislation
having prospective effect. The business has thus been left for thirty years to develop, on
the understanding that it was not subject to existing antitrust legislation. The present
cases ask us to overrule the prior decision and, with retrospective effect, hold the
legislation applicable. We think that if there are evils in this field which now warrant
application to it of the antitrust laws it should be by legislation. Without
re-examination of the underlying issues, the judgments below are affirmed on the authority
of Federal Baseball Club of Baltimore v. National League of Professional
Baseball Clubs, supra, so far as that decision determines that Congress had no
intention of including the business of baseball within the scope of the federal antitrust
laws.
Affirmed.
DISSENT: MR. JUSTICE BURTON, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED concurs, dissenting.
Whatever may have been the situation when the Federal Baseball Club case was
decided in 1922, I am not able to join today's decision which, in effect, announces that
organized baseball, in 1953, still is not engaged in interstate trade or commerce. In the
light of organized baseball's well-known and widely distributed capital investments used
in conducting competitions between teams constantly traveling between states, its receipts
and expenditures of large sums transmitted between states, its numerous purchases of
materials in interstate commerce, the attendance at its local exhibitions of large
audiences often traveling across state lines, its radio and television activities which
expand its audiences beyond state lines, its sponsorship of interstate advertising, and
its highly organized "farm system" of minor league baseball clubs, coupled with
restrictive contracts and understandings between individuals and among clubs or leagues
playing for profit throughout the United States, and even in Canada, Mexico and Cuba, it
is a contradiction in terms to say that the defendants in the cases before us are not now
engaged in interstate trade or commerce as those terms are used in the Constitution of the
United States and in the Sherman Act.
In 1952 the Subcommittee on Study of Monopoly Power, of the House of Representatives
Committee on the Judiciary, after extended hearings, issued a report dealing with
organized baseball in relation to the Sherman Act. In that report it said:
"'Organized baseball' is a combination of approximately 380 separate baseball clubs,
operating in 42 different States, the District of Columbia, Canada, Cuba, and Mexico . . .
.
"Inherently, professional baseball is intercity, intersectional, and interstate. At
the beginning of the 1951 season, the clubs within organized baseball were divided among
52 different leagues. Each league is an unincorporated association of from 6 to 10 clubs
which play championship baseball games among themselves according to a prearranged
schedule. Such a league organization is essential for the successful operation of baseball
as a business.
"Of the 52 leagues associated within organized baseball in 1951, 39 were interstate
in nature."
*In the Federal Baseball Club case the Court did not state that even if the
activities of organized baseball amounted to interstate trade or commerce those activities
were exempt from the Sherman Act. The Court acted on its determination that the activities
before it did not amount to interstate commerce. The Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, in that case, in 1920, described a major league baseball game as "local in
its beginning and in its end." This Court stated that "The business is giving
exhibitions of base ball, which are purely state affairs," and the transportation of
players and equipment between states "is a mere incident . . . ." The main
thrust of the argument of counsel for organized baseball, both in the Court of Appeals and
in this Court, was in support of that proposition. Although counsel did argue that the
activities of organized baseball, even if amounting to interstate commerce, did not
violate the Sherman Act, the Court significantly refrained from expressing its opinion on
that issue.
That the Court realized that the then incidental interstate features of organized baseball
might rise to a magnitude that would compel recognition of them independently is indicated
by the statement made in 1923 by Mr. Justice Holmes, the writer of the Court's opinion in
the Federal Baseball Club case. In 1923, in considering a bill in equity alleging a
violation of the Sherman Act by parties presenting local exhibitions on an interstate
vaudeville circuit, the Court held that the bill should be considered on its merits and,
in writing for the Court, Mr. Justice Holmes said "The bill was brought before the
decision of the Base Ball Club Case, and it may be that what in general is
incidental, in some instances may rise to a magnitude that requires it to be considered
independently."
The 1952 report of the Congressional Subcommittee previously mentioned also said:
"Under judicial interpretations of this constitutional provision [the commerce
clause], the Congress has power to investigate, and pass legislation dealing with
professional baseball, or more particularly 'organized baseball,' if that business is, or
affects, interstate commerce.
. . . .
"After full review of all of the foregoing facts and with due consideration of modern
judicial interpretation of the scope of the commerce clause, it is the studied judgment of
the Subcommittee on the Study of Monopoly Power that the Congress has jurisdiction to
investigate and legislate on the subject of professional baseball." H. R. Rep. No.
2002, 82d Cong., 2d Sess. 4, 7, and see 111-139.
In cases Nos. 18 and 23 the plaintiffs here allege that they are
professional baseball players who have been damaged by enforcement of the standard
"reserve clause" in their contracts pursuant to nationwide agreements among the
defendants.1 In effect they charge that in violation of the
Sherman Act, organized baseball, through its illegal monopoly and unreasonable restraints
of trade, exploits the players who attract the profits for the benefit of the clubs and
leagues. Similarly, in No. 25, the plaintiffs allege that because of illegal and
inequitable agreements of interstate scope between organized baseball and the Mexican
League binding each to respect the other's "reserve clauses" they have lost the
services of and contract rights to certain baseball players. The plaintiffs also allege
that the defendants have entered into a combination, conspiracy and monopoly or an attempt
to monopolize professional baseball in the United States to the substantial damage of the
plaintiffs.
Conceding the major asset which baseball is to our Nation, the high place it enjoys in the
hearts of our people and the possible justification of special treatment for organized
sports which are engaged in interstate trade or commerce, the authorization of such
treatment is a matter within the discretion of Congress. Congress, however, has enacted no
express exemption of organized baseball from the Sherman Act, and no court has
demonstrated the existence of an implied exemption from that Act of any sport that is so
highly organized as to amount to an interstate monopoly or which restrains interstate
trade or commerce. In the absence of such an exemption, the present popularity of
organized baseball increases, rather than diminishes, the importance of its compliance
with standards of reasonableness comparable with those now required by law of interstate
trade or commerce. It is interstate trade or commerce and, as such, it is subject to the
Sherman Act until exempted. Accordingly, I would reverse the judgments in the instant
cases and remand the causes to the respective District Courts for a consideration of the
merits of the alleged violations of the Sherman Act.
1 "The reserve clause is popularly believed to be
some provision in the player contract which gives to the club in organized baseball which
first signs a player a continuing and exclusive right to his services. Commissioner Frick
testified that this popular understanding was essentially correct. He pointed out,
however, that the reserve clause is not merely a provision in the contract, but also
incorporates a reticulated system of rules and regulations which enable, indeed require,
the entire baseball organization to respect and enforce each club's exclusive and
continuous right to the services of its players." H. R. Rep. No. 2002, 82d Cong., 2d
Sess. 111. See also, Section VII, The Reserve Clause, id., at 111-139, and Gardella
v. Chandler, 172 F.2d 402.
In No. 18 the following specific allegations appear and those in No. 23 are comparable:
"XI.
"That the Defendants, and each of them, have entered into or agreed to be bound by a
contract in the restraint of Interstate Commerce; that said contract is designated as the
Major-Minor League Agreement, dated December 6, 1946, and provides in effect that:
"1. All players' contracts in the Major Leagues shall be of one form and that all
players' contracts in the Minor Leagues shall be of one form.
"2. That all players' contracts in any league must provide that the Club or any
assignee thereof shall have the option to renew the player's contract each year and that
the player shall not play for any other club but the club with which he has a contract or
the assignee thereof.
"3. That each club shall, on or before a certain date each year, designate a reserve
list of active and eligible players which it desires to reserve for the ensuing year. That
no player on such a reserve list may thereafter be eligible to play for any other club
until his contract has been assigned or until he has been released.
"4. That the player shall be bound by any assignment of his contract by the club, and
that his remuneration shall be the same as that usually paid by the assignee club to other
players of like ability.
"5. That there shall be no negotiations between a player and any other club from the
one which he is under contract or reservation respecting employment either present or
prospective unless the Club with which the player is connected shall have in writing
expressly authorized such negotiations prior to their commencement.
"6. That in the case of Major League players, the Commissioner of Baseball and in the
case of Minor League players, the President of the National Association, may determine
that the best interests of the game require a player to be declared ineligible and, after
such declaration, no club shall be permitted to employ him unless he shall have been
reinstated from the ineligible list.
"7. That an ineligible player whose name is omitted from a reserve list shall not
thereby be rendered eligible for service unless and until he has applied for and been
granted reinstatement.
"8. That any player who violates his contract or reservation, or who participates in
a game with or against a club containing or controlled by ineligible players or a player
under indictment for conduct detrimental to the good repute of professional baseball,
shall be considered an ineligible player and placed on the ineligible list.
"9. That an ineligible player must be reinstated before he may be released from his
contract.
"10. That clubs shall not tender contracts to ineligible players until they are
reinstated.
"11. That no club may release unconditionally an ineligible player unless such player
is first reinstated from the ineligible list to the active list.
. . . .
"XIII.
"That by reason of Plaintiff being placed and held on said ineligible list as
hereinabove set out and the making of the aforementioned contract by the Defendants, the
Defendant[s], and each of them, have refused since the 25th day of May, 1950, and still do
refuse to allow Plaintiff to play professional baseball, and that Plaintiff has thereby
been deprived of his means of livelihood, all to the Plaintiff's damages in the sum of $
125,000.00."
The complaint also contains a separate cause of action alleging that the defendants, by
virtue of their agreements, have entered into a combination and conspiracy in the
restraint of trade or commerce among the several states, and another cause of action
alleging that the defendants have, by their agreements, combined to monopolize
professional baseball in the United States.
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