MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff American Needle, Inc. (American Needle) brought this antitrust action against defendants, the National Football League (NFL), the individual owners of the NFL’s member teams, National Football League Properties, Inc. (NFLP) and Reebok International, Ltd. (Reebok), for violation of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. Defendants move to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. The motion is granted in part and denied in part.
BACKGROUND
The following facts, taken from plaintiffs complaint, are, for purposes of this motion, accepted as true. American Needle, a corporation headquartered in Buffalo Grove, Illinois, designs, manufactures, and sells headwear carrying the trademarked names and logos of various professional athletic teams. The NFL is an unincorporated association of professional football teams and their owners. The NFLP is a Delaware corporation established by the NFL and its member teams to license their trademarks. For many years, American Needle and other clothing manufacturers were licensed by the NFLP to use NFL teams’ trademarks on their head-wear and apparel. However, in December 2000, the NFL, NFLP and NFL team owners decided to change their licensing practices for the use of trademarks on headwear and apparel — no longer would various manufacturers compete for licenses, nor would the NFLP grant multiple licenses. Instead, the NFLP would enter into an exclusive licensing agreement with one company for the manufacture, sale, and distribution of headwear and apparel carrying the trademarks of the NFL and its member teams. Subsequently, the NFLP entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with Reebok. American Needle’s trademark license with the NFLP expired in March 2001 and was not renewed.
DISCUSSION
A Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss tests the sufficiency of the complaint, not the merits of the case.
Triad Assocs., Inc. v. Chicago Hous. Auth.,
Counts IV and V of plaintiffs complaint allege violations of section 1 of the Sherman Act, which states: “Every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, is hereby declared to be illegal. Every person who shall make any contract or engage in any combination or conspiracy hereby declared to be illegal shall be deemed guilty of a felony,” 15 U.S.C. § 1. Counts I, II and III of plaintiffs complaint allege violation of section 2 of the Sherman Act, which states that “[e]very person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony.” 15 U.S.C. § 2.
In their motion to dismiss, defendants argue that plaintiffs claims for violations of the Sherman Act require it to identify the relevant market in which they have restrained and monopolized trade.
See, e.g., Elliott v. United Center,
The complaint alleges that the 32 professional football teams that constitute the NFL agreed to restrict the use of their intellectual property, opting to allow the NFLP to control it, and that the NFLP agreed to grant Reebok an exclusive license to use the trademarked names and logos of NFL teams on headwear and apparel. Plaintiff claims that this constitutes horizontal price-fixing and a group boycott, per se violations of the Sherman Act, which necessarily results in decreased output and/or supra-competitive prices. In their reply, defendants counter that a per se standard is inapplicable to the NFLP’s agreement with Reebok because agreements involving members of sports leagues must be analyzed under the rule of reason and these agreements cannot be labeled a group boycott or price-fixing. We agree that the per se rule does not apply to defendants’ actions.
The Supreme Court has rejected the
per se
rule when reviewing trade restraints imposed by sports leagues.
NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma,
Since the Supreme Court’s decision in
Board of Regents,
courts have repeatedly rejected the
per se
rule when analyzing a trade restraint imposed by a sports league, opting instead for the rule of reason.
See, e.g., Chicago Professional Sports Limited Partnership v. NBA,
Our analysis of section 1 of the Sherman Act does not end, however, because plaintiff also alleges a violation of the section based on the rule of reason. To determine whether a trade restraint runs afoul of antitrust law under the rule of reason, a court must determine the consequences of the restraint on the affected market.
See Havoco of America, Ltd. v. Shell Oil Co.,
Plaintiff alleges that defendants’ conduct has affected six relevant markets: (1) the market for licenses to use NFL and NFL teams’ trademarks in the design, manufacture and sale of apparel, (2) the market for licenses to use these trademarks in the design, manufacture and sale of headwear, (3) the wholesale market for the sale and distribution of apparel with these trademarks, (4) the wholesale market for the sale and distribution of headwear with these trademarks, (5) the market for the manufacture of apparel with the NFL and NFL teams’ trademarks, and finally, (6) the market for the manufacture of head-wear with these trademarks. Defendants argue that none of these alleged markets, which are all defined by the use of trademarks, can support plaintiffs antitrust claims because market definitions contingent on trademarks are inadequate as a matter of law. In addressing defendants’ argument, we do not determine whether or not the facts support plaintiffs market definitions, but only determine whether the law will permit the sort of market definitions alleged.
Rohlfing v. Manor Care, Inc.,
A relevant market is composed of products whose use is interchangeable and for which there is a “cross-elasticity of demand.”
Brown Shoe Co. v. United States,
For this reason, courts have repeatedly rejected markets that are defined by a company’s trademark.
See, e.g., Generac Corp. v. Caterpillar Inc.,
Yet, the analysis from these trademark cases cannot be readily applied to the facts of the instant case. The trademarks integral to plaintiffs market definitions—the names and logos of the NFL and its member teams—do not serve to “identify the origin” of the products that carry them. (The tag reading Reebok, as opposed to Nike or Adidas or Champion or American Needle, serves the generally accepted purpose of trademarks, informing the customer of the origin of the apparel and perhaps revealing something to the customer about its quality. But neither Reebok’s trademark, nor that trademark’s purpose, is relevant to our inquiry.) Nor is it clear that these NFL trademarks “protect only the name or symbol of the product.” The NFL team names and logos that appear on apparel and headwear are not a “symbol” of the T-shirt or cap on which they appear. In fact, the NFL teams’ trademarks carried on a T-shirt or cap may be more properly viewed as the product itself, rather than the T-shirt or cap. 2
Defendants cite
Carell v. Shubert Organization, Inc.,
In
Board of Regents,
The Seventh Circuit also found that a sport’s television broadcasts constitute their own market, though the court’s reasoning varied from that in
Board of Regents. See Chicago Professional Sports Limited Partnership v. NBA,
Our analysis is limited to the issues raised in defendants’ motion to dismiss. As pointed out above, we have not determined whether the markets plaintiff alleges do in fact exist, thereby supporting its claims. We have found only that the law does not preclude an antitrust claim based on such markets. Even though plaintiffs market definitions do not fall due to reliance on NFL trademarks, they may still be improper. As indicated in our analysis, if the true product in this case is NFL teams’ logos, not the items that carry them, then there may be no justification for limiting the relevant market to head-wear and apparel that carry these logos. Perhaps, the market would more properly include all merchandise carrying NFL logos. Of course, this broader market definition would then alter the impact of the exclusive contract with Reebok, which is allegedly limited to the manufacture and distribution of headwear and apparel. 4
Many questions concerning the viability of plaintiffs claims remain. For example, it is far from clear, for a different reason, that NFLP’s control over the trademarks and logos is subject to the antitrust laws. The same reasoning that has led courts to reject the
per
se concept, when somewhat extended, can lead to the conclusion that the NFL should be viewed as a single source for the purpose of protecting the clubs’ trademarks and logos. The league may be viewed much like a franchisor. The NFL may license others to use its trademarks and logos to affix to merchandise and apparel they make, just as McDonald’s licenses its trademarks for use by others, who make hamburgers. The NFL may have as great an interest as McDonald’s in protecting the good will inher
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion to dismiss count IV is granted, and their motion to dismiss counts I, II, III and V is denied.
Notes
. Nonetheless, courts have not foreclosed the possibility that under certain circumstances a well-defined, distinct market could consist of just one brand of a product.
See U.S. Anchor Mfg., Inc. v. Rule Industries, Inc.,
. This is in contrast to the purpose of the NFL trademarks discussed in
Weber v. National Football League,
. Though the markets in
Board of Regents,
. Though it is not relevant to the inquiry before us and carries no weight at this stage in the litigation, it is worth noting that Reebok's 2004 Annual Report, contradicts the complaint’s assertion that the company is “the exclusive provider of apparel and head-wear bearing the Trademarks of the individual NFL Teams and the NFL.” Reebok's Annual Report states that it has an exclusive right to manufacture and distribute NFL-branded replica jerseys, headwear, footwear and gloves and is the exclusive distributor of NFL-branded apparel and accessories in some distribution channels. However, it is "a nonexclusive distributor of NFL-branded apparel through catalogs, in retail stores that primarily carry NFL-branded products and in other retail channels.”
