1. The business of providing public baseball games for profit
between clubs of professional baseball players in a league and
between clubs of rival leagues, although necessarily involving the
constantly repeated traveling of the players from one state to
another, provided for, controlled, and disciplined by the
organizations employing them, is not interstate commerce. P.
259 U. S.
208.
2.
Held that an action for triple damages under the
Anti-Trust Acts could not be maintained by a baseball club against
baseball leagues and their constituent clubs, joined with
individuals, for an alleged conspiracy to monopolize the baseball
business resulting injuriously to the plaintiff. P.
259 U. S. 209.
269 F. 681, 50 App.D.C. 165, affirmed.
Error to a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia reversing a judgment for triple damages under the
Anti-Trust Acts recovered by the
Page 259 U. S. 201
plaintiff in error in the Supreme Court of the District and
directing that judgment be entered for the defendants.
Page 259 U. S. 207
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for threefold damages brought by the plaintiff in
error under the Anti-Trust Acts of July 2, 1890, c. 647, § 7,
26 Stat. 209, 210, and of October 15, 1914, c. 323, § 4, 38
Stat. 730, 731. The defendants are the National League of
Professional Base Ball Clubs and the American League of
Professional Base Ball Clubs, unincorporated associations, composed
respectively of groups of eight incorporated baseball clubs, joined
as defendants; the presidents of the two Leagues and a third
person, constituting what is known as the National Commission,
having considerable powers in carrying out an agreement between the
two Leagues, and three other persons having powers in the Federal
League of Professional Base Ball Clubs, the relation of which to
this case will be explained. It is alleged that these defendants
conspired to monopolize the baseball business, the means adopted
being set forth with a detail which, in the view that we take, it
is unnecessary to repeat.
The plaintiff is a baseball club incorporated in Maryland, and,
with seven other corporations, was a member of the Federal League
of Professional Base Ball Players, a corporation under the laws of
Indiana, that attempted to compete with the combined defendants. It
alleges that the defendants destroyed the Federal League by buying
up some of the constituent clubs and in one way or another inducing
all those clubs except the plaintiff to leave their League, and
that the three persons connected with the Federal League and named
as defendants, one of them being the President of the League, took
part in the conspiracy. Great damage to the plaintiff is alleged.
The
Page 259 U. S. 208
plaintiff obtained a verdict for $80,000 in the Supreme Court,
and a judgment for treble the amount was entered, but the Court of
Appeals, after an elaborate discussion, held that the defendants
were not within the Sherman Act. The appellee, the plaintiff,
elected to stand on the record in order to bring the case to this
Court at once, and thereupon judgment was ordered for the
defendants.
National League of Professional Baseball Clubs v.
Federal Baseball Club of Baltimore, 50 App.D.C. 165, 269 F.
681, 68. It is not argued that the plaintiff waived any rights by
its course.
Thomsen v. Cayser, 243 U. S.
66.
The decision of the Court of Appeals went to the root of the
case, and, if correct, makes it unnecessary to consider other
serious difficulties in the way of the plaintiff's recovery. A
summary statement of the nature of the business involved will be
enough to present the point. The clubs composing the Leagues are in
different cities and for the most part in different states. The end
of the elaborate organizations and sub-organizations that are
described in the pleadings and evidence is that these clubs shall
play against one another in public exhibitions for money, one or
the other club crossing a state line in order to make the meeting
possible. When, as the result of these contests, one club has won
the pennant of its league and another club has won the pennant of
the other league, there is a final competition for the world's
championship between these two. Of course, the scheme requires
constantly repeated traveling on the part of the clubs, which is
provided for, controlled, and disciplined by the organizations, and
this, it is said, means commerce among the states. But we are of
opinion that the Court of Appeals was right.
The business is giving exhibitions of baseball, which are purely
state affairs. It is true that, in order to attain for these
exhibitions the great popularity that they have achieved,
competitions must be arranged between clubs from different cities
and states. But the fact that, in order
Page 259 U. S. 209
to give the exhibitions, the Leagues must induce free persons to
cross state lines and must arrange and pay for their doing so is
not enough to change the character of the business. According to
the distinction insisted upon in
Hooper v. California,
155 U. S. 648,
155 U. S. 655,
the transport is a mere incident, not the essential thing. That to
which it is incident, the exhibition, although made for money,
would not be called trade of commerce in the commonly accepted use
of those words. As it is put by defendant, personal effort not
related to production is not a subject of commerce. That which in
its consummation is not commerce does not become commerce among the
states because the transportation that we have mentioned takes
place. To repeat the illustrations given by the court below, a firm
of lawyers sending out a member to argue a case, or the Chautauqua
lecture bureau sending out lecturers, does not engage in such
commerce because the lawyer or lecturer goes to another state.
If we are right, the plaintiff's business is to be described in
the same way, and the restrictions by contract that prevented the
plaintiff from getting players to break their bargains and the
other conduct charged against the defendants were not an
interference with commerce among the states.
Judgment affirmed.