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NCAA Appeals Ruling on Compensation for Student-Athletes

On November 14, 2014, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) submitted its initial brief to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals challenging the Northern District of California’s August decision that the NCAA’s rules banning student-athletes for being compensated for the use of their names, images and likenesses violated antitrust laws.  O’Bannon v. National Collegiate Athletic Association, et al., case number 14-16601.  The NCAA argued that these rules do not violate the Sherman Act because of the Supreme Court’s decision in NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, 468 U.S. 85 (1984).  In that case, the Supreme Court determined that rules aimed at protecting the amateurism of college athletes, such as bans on paying students to play, were not prohibited by the antitrust laws.  The NCAA contended that rules banning compensation for student-athletes’ likenesses are the same as the prohibitions on being paid to play, and therefore, should be allowed under the Supreme Court’s amateurism precedent.  In addition, the NCAA argued that plaintiffs lack antitrust standing because publicity rights in television broadcasts of games are not recognized by states.  Further, the association claimed that its rules do not involve a commercial activity, so the Sherman Act should not apply.

This case originated in 2009 when two former NCAA student-athletes filed class action suits against the NCAA, Electronic Arts, Inc. and Collegiate Licensing Co., alleging that these organizations profited from student-athlete likenesses on television, in video games and on merchandise while prohibiting the athletes from receiving payment.  After a three-week bench trial in the summer, District Judge Wilken entered an injunction against the NCAA after determining that without the NCAA rules, Division I basketball and Football Bowl Subdivision schools would compete for recruits’ athletic talents and licensing rights as well as compete to offer athletic and educational opportunities for students.  The NCAA previously settled with plaintiffs for $20 million over the use of students’ likenesses in video games, and Electronic Arts and Collegiate Licensing also reached a settlement with both plaintiff groups for $40 million.




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Judge Rules NCAA Ban on Student-Athlete Compensation Violates Antitrust Law

On Friday, August 8, 2014, the Northern District of California determined that the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA’s) rules banning student-athletes for being compensated for the use of their names, images and likenesses violated antitrust laws.  In re Student-Athlete Name & Likeness Licensing Litigation, case number 4:90-cv-01967.  During the three week-long bench trial in June 2014, the student athletes argued that the NCAA and its member schools and conferences conspired to fix compensation for the use of athletes’ likenesses at zero.  The NCAA countered by contending that not paying athletes stopped some schools from being able to compensate students more than others, that athletes received benefits, such as an education and room and board, for playing college sports, that the rule protected these students’ amateur status, that paying athletes would cause tension with non-athlete classmates, and that fans would not watch college sports if athletes were paid.  District Judge Wilken was unpersuaded by the NCAA’s arguments.  In her ruling, Judge Wilken stated that the NCAA did not provide credible evidence that fans would abandon supporting their teams if athletes were paid.  Moreover, because schools compete for recruits with impressive facilities and highly-paid coaches, the NCAA undercut its argument that not compensating student-athletes leveled the competitive playing field between colleges.  Instead, Judge Wilken determined that without these rules, Division I basketball and Football Bowl Subdivision schools would compete for recruits’ athletic talents and licensing rights as well as compete to offer athletic and educational opportunities for students.

In entering an injunction against the NCAA, Judge Wilken suggested that NCAA member schools should increase the stipends paid to students to cover the full cost of attending college, and she also recommended that schools hold money collected from the use of students’ likenesses in a trust for the students until they graduate.  At the same time, however, she refused to allow student athletes to receive money from product endorsements.  On Monday, August 11, 2014, the NCAA asked Judge Wilken to clarify the application of her order, which stated that the injunction prohibiting the NCAA’s ban on compensating players would begin with athletes who enroll after July 1, 2016.  The NCAA requested that Judge Wilken explain whether the injunction applied to current student athletes beginning in July 2016 or whether it only applied to recruits who start college after that date.

This case originated in 2009 when two former NCAA student-athletes filed class action suits against the NCAA, Electronic Arts Inc. and Collegiate Licensing Co., alleging that these organizations profited from student-athlete likenesses on television, in video games and on merchandise while prohibiting the athletes from receiving payment.  The NCAA previously settled with plaintiffs for $20 million over the use of students’ likenesses in video games, and Electronic Arts and Collegiate Licensing also reached a settlement with both plaintiff groups for $40 million.  Both settlements received preliminary approval from Judge Wilken in July 2014.




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Court Won’t Reconsider Prior Ruling in NCAA Class Action

On May 12, 2014, the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) lost its motion for leave to file a motion for reconsideration of a prior ruling, which barred the NCAA from arguing at trial that not paying student-athletes for their likenesses increased competition by raising financial support for women’s and less prominent men’s athletics.  A former NCAA basketball player originally filed a class action suit against the NCAA in 2009 in the Northern District of California, alleging that the NCAA profited from student-athlete likenesses on television and in video games while prohibiting the athletes from receiving payment.  In re Student-Athlete Name & Likeness Licensing Litigation, case number 4:90-cv-01967.  In April 2014, upon consideration of the parties’ opposing motions for summary judgment, District Judge Claudia Wilken ruled that plaintiffs were entitled to summary judgment as to the NCAA’s fourth justification for the challenged restraint – greater support for women’s and less prominent men’s sports – because this argument was not legitimately pro-competitive.  Judge Wilken first determined that the NCAA could not restrain competition in the relevant market, football and men’s basketball, to allegedly promote competition in the markets for women’s sports and less prominent men’s sports.  Second, the NCAA could financially support women’s sports and less prominent men’s sports through less restrictive means by forcing member conferences to redistribute a greater portion of profits made from football and men’s basketball to these other sports.  In moving for leave to file a motion for reconsideration, the NCAA submitted a declaration and report from an economic expert, who argued that the relevant market should be broadened to include athletes who play sports other than football and men’s basketball.  In response to the NCAA’s arguments, Wilken concluded that plaintiffs’ allegations challenged conduct with respect to football and men’s basketball, and the possibility that the challenged behavior affected student-athletes in other sports did not redefine the relevant market.  Judge Wilken thus denied the motion, reiterating that the purported pro-competitive justification did not address competition in the relevant market of football and men’s basketball.  Trial is set to begin on June 9, 2014.




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NCAA Compensation Cartel Allegations Take Center Court

On March 17, 2014, a class action lawsuit was filed against the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA), alleging that capping compensation to college athletes violates Sherman Act Section 1.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of all Division I college football and men’s basketball players, and named five major conferences within the NCAA as co-defendants:  the Atlantic Coast (ACC), Big Ten, Big 12, Pacific-12, and Southeastern (SEC).  The suit alleges that “Defendants have entered into what amounts to cartel agreements with the avowed purpose and effect of placing a ceiling on the compensation that may be paid to these athletes for their services.”  Currently under NCAA rules, colleges may only compensate student athletes with a “full grant-in-aid” (the amount of tuition, room and board, and textbooks).

The complaint goes on to state that the NCAA “rules constitute horizontal agreements” among the defendants who drafted and agreed upon the rules, yet “compete with each other for the services of top-tier college football and men’s basketball players.”  In addition to monetary damages, the plaintiffs are seeking injunctive relief that would allow colleges to freely negotiate with and compensate student athletes.  The case is filed in the U.S. District Court of New Jersey.

 




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District Court Declines to Certify Damages Subclass in NCAA Case

On November 8, 2013, the Northern District of California certified a class of current and former student athletes seeking injunctive relief under the Sherman Act but declined to certify a damages subclass in the case In re NCAA Student-Athlete Name & Likeness Licensing Litig., 4:09-cv-01967-CW (N.D. Cal. November 8, 2013).  The plaintiffs, current and former NCAA Division I men’s football and basketball players, alleged that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) conspired with a video game developer and a marketing firm in developing rules prohibiting student athletes from receiving compensation for the commercial use of their names, images and likenesses.

Plaintiffs sought certification of the injunctive relief class pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2) and certification of the damages class under Rule 23(b)(3).  The Court certified the injunctive relief class, rejecting defendants’ argument that certification under Rule 23(b)(2) is inappropriate where plaintiffs are also seeking monetary relief.  The court explained that plaintiffs generally may seek certification of multiple classes pursuant to different subdivisions of Rule 23(b).

The proposed damages subclass by definition included only those athletes who were depicted in video games or game footage after 2005.  The court declined to certify the damages class under Rule 23(b)(3), holding that plaintiffs failed to satisfy the manageability requirement because they did not provide a feasible way to identify class members that were actually harmed by the NCAA’s conduct.  One barrier to manageability was the “substitution effect:” if student athletes had not been prohibited from receiving compensation, many athletes who left college early to play professionally would have stayed in college and displaced other student athletes on their respective teams.  Therefore, some members of the damages class may have actually benefitted from the NCAA rules by earning roster spots that would not have otherwise been available.  Plaintiffs failed to provide a feasible method for determining which class members would have still played for Division I teams without the NCAA’s rules.

The court also identified two other barriers to manageability: plaintiffs did not provide a feasible method for determining on a classwide basis (1) which athletes were depicted in video games, or (2) which class members appeared in game footage during the relevant period.  With respect to the latter, plaintiffs referenced third-party sources such as team rosters, game summaries and televised game schedules, but the court found this inadequate because “they have not provided any formula for extracting the relevant information from each of these resources and using that information to identify putative class members.”




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NCAA Argues For Dismissal of Athletes’ Latest Antitrust Complaint

by Megan Morley

Last week, the NCAA asked the Northern District of California to throw out a suit initiated in 2009 on behalf of former and current NCAA athletes.  NCAA Student-Athlete Names & Likeness Licensing Litigation, case number 4:09-cv-01967.  The athletes claim that the NCAA, its member schools, video game creator Electronic Arts (“EA”), and the Collegiate Licensing Company (“CLC”) conspired not to compensate athletes for the use of their names, images, and likenesses in video games and television broadcasts.  Specifically, the third amended complaint alleges that the NCAA and its member schools agreed not to offer athletes licensing revenues and that EA and CLC agreed to follow the NCAA’s no compensation rule so as not to undermine the scheme.  As a result of this conspiracy, the athletes were deprived of compensation for defendants’ use of their names and likenesses and were excluded from entering the market for the licensing, use, and sale of their names and images.

In response, the NCAA moved to dismiss the action.  It told the court that in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma, 468 U.S. 85 (1984), the athletes cannot allege any facts that can allow the action to survive.  In that case, the Supreme Court upheld the prohibition on paying student-athletes as procompetitive because the ban preserved amateurism in collegiate sports.  Id. at 117.  In addition, the NCAA argued that its rules did not deny any rights the athletes had to license their names and likenesses in broadcast games because the law does not recognize these rights in sporting events.  The NCAA further pointed out that it did not provide any licenses to EA for use in EA’s video games.  Lastly, the NCAA disputed the former athletes’ claims that the compensation ban prevented these individual’s ability to license their names and likenesses because the amateurism rules only apply to current student-athletes.




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