Lead Opinion
C.B.C. Distribution and Marketing, Inc., brought this action for a declaratory judgment against Major League Baseball Advanced Media, L.P., to establish its right to use, without license, the names of and information about major league baseball players in connection with its fantasy baseball products. Advanced Media counterclaimed, maintaining that CBC’s fantasy baseball products violated rights of publicity belonging to major league baseball players and that the players, through their association, had licensed those rights to Advanced Media, the interactive media and Internet company of major league baseball. The Major League Baseball Players Association intervened in the suit, joining in Advanced Media’s claims and further asserting a breach of contract claim against CBC. The district court granted summary judgment to CBC, see C.B.C. Distrib. and Mktg., Inc. v. Major League Baseball Advanced Media, L.P.,
I.
CBC sells fantasy sports products via its Internet website, e-mail, mail, and the telephone. Its fantasy baseball products incorporate the names along with performance and biographical data of actual major league baseball players. Before the commencement of the major league baseball season each spring, participants form their fantasy baseball teams by “drafting” players from various major league baseball teams. Participants compete against other fantasy baseball “owners” who have also drafted their own teams. A participant’s success, and his or her team’s success, depends on the actual performance of the
From 1995 through the end of 2004, CBC licensed its use of the names of and information about major league players from the Players Association pursuant to license agreements that it entered into with the association in 1995 and 2002. The 2002 agreement, which superseded in its entirety the 1995 agreement, licensed to CBC “the names, nicknames, likenesses, signatures, pictures, playing records, and/or biographical data of each player” (the “Rights”) to be used in association with CBC’s fantasy baseball products.
In 2005, after the 2002 agreement expired, the Players Association licensed to Advanced Media, with some exceptions, the exclusive right to use baseball players’ names and performance information “for exploitation via all interactive media.” Advanced Media began providing fantasy baseball games on its website, MLB.com, the official website of major league baseball. It offered CBC, in exchange for a commission, a license to promote the MLB.com fantasy baseball games on CBC’s website but did not offer CBC a license to continue to offer its own fantasy baseball products. This conduct by Advanced Media prompted CBC to file the present suit, alleging that it had “a reasonable apprehension that it will be sued by Advanced Media if it continues to operate its fantasy baseball games.”
The district court granted summary judgment to CBC. It held that CBC was not infringing any state-law rights of publicity that belonged to major league baseball players. C.B.C.,
Because this appeal is from the district court’s grant of summary judgment, our review is de novo, and we apply “the same standards as the district court and view[ ] the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Travelers Prop. Cas. Co. of Am. v. General Cas. Ins. Co.,
II.
A.
An action based on the right of publicity is a state-law claim. See Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broad. Co.,
With respect to the symbol-of-identity element, the Missouri Supreme Court has observed that “ ‘the name used by the defendant must be understood by the audience as referring to the plaintiff.’ ” The state court had further held that “[i]n resolving this issue, the fact-finder may consider evidence including ‘the nature and extent of the identifying characteristics used by the defendant, the defendant’s intent, the fame of the plaintiff, evidence of actual identification made by third persons, and surveys or other evidence indicating the perceptions of the audience.’ ” Doe,
Here, we entertain no doubt that the players’ names that CBC used are understood by it and its fantasy baseball subscribers as referring to actual major league baseball players. CBC itself admits that: In responding to the appellants’ argument that “this element is met by the mere confirmation that the name used, in fact, refers to the famous person asserting the violation,” CBC stated in its brief that “if this is all the element requires, CBC agrees that it is met.” We think that by reasoning that “identity,” rather than “mere use of a name,” “is a critical element of the right of publicity,” the district court did not understand that when a name alone is sufficient to establish identity, the defendant’s use of that name satisfies the plaintiffs burden to show that a name was used as a symbol of identity.
It is true that with respect to the “commercial advantage” element of a cause of action for violating publicity rights, CBC’s use does not fit neatly into the more traditional categories of commercial advantage, namely, using individuals’ names for advertising and merchandising purposes in a way that states or intimates that the individuals are endorsing a product. Cf. Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition § 47 cmt. a, b. But the Restatement, which the Missouri Supreme Court has recognized as authority in this kind of case, see Doe,
B.
CBC argues that the first amendment nonetheless trumps the right-of-publicity action that Missouri law provides. Though this dispute is between private parties, the state action necessary for first amendment protections exists because the right-of-publicity claim exists only insofar as the courts enforce state-created obligations that were “never explicitly assumed” by CBC. See Cohen v. Cowles Media Co.,
The Supreme Court has directed that state law rights of publicity must be balanced against first amendment considerations, see Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broad.,
Courts have also recognized the public value of information about the game of baseball and its players, referring to baseball as “the national pastime.” Cardtoons,
In addition, the facts in this case barely, if at all, implicate the interests that states typically intend to vindicate by providing rights of publicity to individuals. Economic interests that states seek to promote include the right of an individual to reap the rewards of his or her endeavors and an individual’s right to earn a living. Other motives for creating a publicity right are the desire to provide incentives to encourage a person’s productive activities and to protect consumers from misleading advertising. See Zacchini,
Then there are so-called non-monetary interests that publicity rights are sometimes thought to advance. These include protecting natural rights, rewarding celebrity labors, and avoiding emotional harm. See Cardtoons,
Because we hold that CBC’s first amendment rights in offering its fantasy baseball products supersede the players’ rights of publicity, we need not reach CBC’s alternative argument that federal copyright law preempts the players’ state law rights of publicity.
III.
We come finally to the breach of contract issue. The 2002 contract between the Players Association and CBC specifically provided: “It is understood and agreed that [the Players Association] is the sole and exclusive holder of all right, title and interest in and to the Rights.” CBC undertook not to “dispute or attack the title or any rights of Players’ Association in and to the Rights and/or the Trademarks or the validity of the license granted,” either during or after the expiration of the agreement (the no-challenge provision). CBC also agreed that, upon expiration or termination of the contract, it would “refrain from further use of the Rights and/or the Trademarks or any further reference to them, either directly or indirectly” (the no-use provision). The Players Association maintains that the no-challenge and no-use provisions of the 2002
In holding the no-use and no-challenge provisions unenforceable as against public policy, the district court applied a Supreme Court decision dealing with patents. In that case, the Supreme Court held that the doctrine of licensee estoppel (under which a licensee is estopped from contesting the validity of its license, see Idaho Potato Comm’n v. M & M Produce Farm & Sales,
We do not reach the issue of whether Lear is applicable here, though, because we believe that the contested contract terms are unenforceable for a different reason. We first note that in its brief, CBC argued that it should be relieved of its no-use and no-challenge obligations because the Players Association breached a warranty contained in § 1(b) of the 2002 agreement. Section 1(b) of the agreement provides that “[the Players Association] represents and warrants that it has the authority to grant the rights licensed herein.” CBC argued that this was a warranty of title in the players’ publicity rights and that the Players Association breached this warranty, either because the players did not have publicity rights or because CBC’s first amendment rights superseded any such publicity rights. We find this argument meritless: Section 1(b) is not a warranty of title, it is merely a warranty that the Players Association is the agent of the players. That warranty was not breached.
Although the parties did not cite to it in their briefs, the agreement does contain what we believe is a warranty of title not in § 1(b), but in § 8(a). The agreement provides that its interpretation will be governed by New York law. In New York, a contractual warranty is defined as “ ‘an assurance by one party to a contract of the existence of a fact upon which the other party may rely.’ ” CBS Inc. v. Ziff-Davis Publ’g Co.,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s grant of summary judgment to CBC is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I agree with the court’s discussion of the right of publicity in Missouri and the application of the First Amendment in this context. I would resolve the contractual issues differently, however, and I therefore respectfully dissent.
Advanced Media and the Major League Baseball Players Association (“MLBPA”) contend that CBC has violated two provisions of the applicable License Agreement as set forth in the majority opinion — the “no-challenge” provision and the “no-use” provision. CBC does not really dispute that it violated the restrictions, but it contends that the contractual provisions are unenforceable. I disagree with the court’s conclusion, sua sponte, that the provisions are unenforceable because MLBPA breached a warranty set forth in section 8(a) of the agreement.
Section 8(a) appears under a heading “Ownership of Rights.” It provides as follows: “It is understood and agreed that MLBPA is the sole and exclusive holder of all right, title and interest in and to the Rights and/or Trademarks for the duration of this Agreement.” Given the court’s resolution of issues concerning the right of publicity and the First Amendment, section 8(a) wins the day for CBC only if it is a warranty by MLBPA that CBC does not have rights under the First Amendment to use the players’ names and statistics in its fantasy baseball games.
Assuming that section 8(a) does address CBC’s constitutional rights (as opposed merely to the players’ state-law rights of publicity, which are accurately represented), and assuming that one party’s prediction about the constitutional rights of another party is the sort of “fact” that can be warranted under New York law, section 8(a) does not purport to make such a warranty. The provision states that the parties “agree” that MLPBA is the sole and exclusive holder of all right, title and interest in and to the Rights. CBC surely can “agree,” as a matter of good business judgment, to bargain away any uncertain First Amendment rights that it may have in exchange for the certainty of what it considers to be an advantageous contractual arrangement. See Paragould Cablevision v. City of Paragould,
I also do not believe the district court’s grant of summary judgment invalidating the no-use and no-contest provisions can be sustained on the grounds actually raised by CBC. I agree with the court that MLBPA has not breached the warranty set forth in section 1(b) of the agreement. And I would not adopt the district court’s conclusion that the Supreme Court’s decision in Lear, Inc. v. Adkins,
For these reasons, I would reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of CBC.
