After the denial of its requested Division II designation for the 2018 season of men's professional soccer, the North American Soccer League, LLC ("NASL") filed an antitrust suit against the United States Soccer Federation, Inc. ("USSF"). NASL also moved for a preliminary injunction, seeking designation as a Division II league pending resolution of the suit. This opinion addresses that motion. We conclude NASL has not demonstrated a clear likelihood of
I
As the regional governing body for soccer in the United States and Canada, USSF designates leagues as Division I, II, or III according to USSF's Professional League Standards (the "Standards"). The Standards establish requirements that a league must meet to gain a divisional designation-also called a sanction-for a season of play. The more competitive the division, the higher the bar. For example, the 2008 Standards required that a Division I league have a minimum of ten teams distributed in at least three time zones; a Division II league have a minimum of eight teams in at least two time zones; and a Division III league have a minimum of eight teams, with no time-zone requirement.
Soccer leagues apply to USSF to receive annual designations for the upcoming season of play by submitting reports demonstrating their compliance, or plans for compliance, with the Standards. Leagues may submit requests for waivers from compliance with the Standards' requirements. The USSF Board votes on divisional designations after reviewing the recommendations of USSF's Professional League Task Force ("Task Force"). The Board is composed of fifteen directors, two of whom are chosen by the professional leagues.
The same process applies for revising the Standards; the USSF Board works in conjunction with a Professional League Standards Task Force ("Standards Task Force"). 1 Unchanged from 1996 to 2008, the Standards for all divisions were revised in 2008 and 2014, and for only Division II in 2010. 2
The three most prominent men's professional soccer leagues have historically occupied their respective divisions in isolation. Major League Soccer, LLC ("MLS") has been the only Division I men's soccer league since MLS's start in 1995. NASL has existed since 2009 and has operated as a Division II league since 2011. The United Soccer Leagues, LLC ("USL") ordinarily has filled the Division III slot. According to NASL, it long has harbored aspirations to compete against MLS in Division I; in contrast, USL has been content as an MLS feeder league.
It often pays to be at the top, of course, and MLS has enjoyed competitive benefits as the top-tier league since its inception. Indeed, USSF, when establishing men's soccer in the United States, decided "to not sanction any other league as a [Division I] men's professional outdoor league until MLS had finished its second full season in 1997-to give it a 'runway' of sorts." Gulati Decl. ¶ 64. MLS's top-tier status has economic benefit as well. MLS and USSF have a "business relationship" through which Soccer United Market ("SUM"), a marketing company, has the rights to "bundle[d]" MLS and USSF sponsorship
Like the other leagues, NASL annually applies to USSF for a divisional designation. It operated as a Division II league for the 2011-2017 seasons, receiving compliance waivers for all but one season. Although NASL made a play for a Division I designation for 2016, its application was denied, and NASL operated as a Division II league (with waivers) for that season. For the 2018 season, NASL applied for a Division II designation, requesting waivers for the minimum-team and time-zone requirements. The USSF Board rejected NASL's Division II application but gave NASL additional time to file for Division III status. NASL filed suit instead.
NASL contends that USSF conspired with its membership and related entities in adopting, amending, and applying its Standards in an anticompetitive manner to preclude NASL and other leagues from competing with MLS in the Division I market.
See
NASL's motion for a preliminary injunction is tied to its allegations in the first count of its Complaint-that USSF violated
II
This Court reviews a district court's legal rulings
de novo
and its ultimate denial of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion.
McCreary Cty. v. Am. Civil Liberties Union of Ky.
,
A. Applicable Standard for the Preliminary Injunction
Courts refer to preliminary injunctions as prohibitory or mandatory. Prohibitory injunctions maintain the status quo pending resolution of the case; mandatory injunctions alter it. 4
Because the proposed injunction's effect on the status quo drives the standard, we must ascertain the status quo-that is, "the last actual, peaceable uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy."
Mastrio v. Sebelius
,
NASL seeks to alter this near-decade-long relationship of annual sanctioning between the parties. Although NASL has never received a designation absent the annual process, it now requests a Division II designation for the duration of this litigation. NASL, looking to upend the federation-league sanctioning framework, seeks a mandatory injunction.
NASL argues that applying a heightened standard here would require applying that standard any time a party seeks an injunction to maintain "critical benefits" they have long received. Appellant's Br. 3. This case is different than the benefits-termination cases, however. In those cases, the status quo is one in which the plaintiff continues receiving previously granted benefits.
See
Holt v. Cont'l Grp.
,
"The purpose of a preliminary injunction is ... to preserve the relative positions of the parties."
B. Clear Likelihood of Success on the Merits
NASL's claim is anchored in § 1 of the Sherman Act.
9
Section 1 prohibits "[e]very contract, combination ... or conspiracy[ ] in restraint of trade or commerce."
NASL alleges that "USSF and co-conspirators MLS, USL and SUM have entered into a continuing agreement, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade with the purpose, intent and effect of restraining
1. Contract, Combination, or Conspiracy 10
For an arrangement to be a conspiracy under § 1, it "must embody concerted action."
Am. Needle
,
A plaintiff must offer "direct or circumstantial evidence that reasonably tends to prove ... a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective."
Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp.
,
The District Court concluded that the USSF Board's promulgation of the Standards was not direct evidence of concerted action among USSF, the leagues, and SUM. According to the court, NASL needed to show there was "an agreement to agree to vote a particular way" before the Standards could satisfy the concerted-action requirement.
NASL
, No. 17-CV-05495, --- F.Supp.3d at ----,
NASL argues that the District Court erred in applying the Monsanto standard for inferring a conspiracy because the Standards are direct evidence of a conspiracy. We disagree.
The
Monsanto - Matsushita
framework works here.
See
Monsanto
,
Moreover, organizational decisions do not inherently constitute § 1 concerted action. NASL's argument misinterprets the meaning of concerted action in antitrust law. "[Not] every action by a trade association is ... concerted action by the association's members."
AD/SAT, Div. of Skylight, Inc. v. Associated Press
,
In fairness to NASL, organizational decisions sometimes are § 1 concerted action. For example, when there is direct evidence of an alleged conspiracy via an association's express regulation of its members' market. In
Associated Press
, the government challenged as illegal a cooperative news association's by-laws that restricted membership and prohibited members from distributing news to nonmembers.
Associated Press v. United States
,
If NASL were challenging the Standards themselves-in totality-as violative of the antitrust laws, then the USSF Board's promulgation of them would constitute direct evidence of § 1 concerted action in that undertaking.
11
As for the clearly alleged overarching conspiracy to restrain competition in markets for top- and second-tier men's professional soccer leagues in North America, the promulgation of the Standards is circumstantial evidence of that conspiracy. The District Court properly evaluated the Standards along with other circumstantial evidence of NASL's conspiracy allegations, concluding that NASL had not sufficiently shown the presence of concerted action.
See
NASL
, 17-CV-05495, --- F.Supp.3d at ---- - ----,
2. Unreasonable Restraint
Only unreasonable restraints on competition violate § 1 of the Sherman Act. Courts use one of two tests here. "[A] restraint may be adjudged unreasonable either because it fits within a class of restraints that has been held to be '
per se
' unreasonable, or because it violates what has come to be known as the 'Rule of Reason.' "
Ind. Fed'n of Dentists
,
NASL argues for an abbreviated, "quick look" version of the rule of reason, 12 which applies when "no elaborate industry analysis is required to demonstrate the anticompetitive character of [the challenged] agreement."
The District Court properly applied the three-step rule-of-reason framework. First, a plaintiff bears the initial burden of demonstrating that a defendant's challenged behavior can have an adverse effect on competition in the relevant market.
United States v. Am. Express Co.
,
Under the first step of the rule of reason, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the alleged restraint has an adverse effect on competition.
Am. Express
,
The District Court did not err in finding that NASL indirectly established an adverse effect on competition in "the market for (1) top-tier and (2) second-tier men's professional soccer leagues located in the United States and Canada."
The burden then shifts to USSF to offer evidence of the Standards' procompetitive effects.
See
Am. Express
,
The District Court also did not err in finding that USSF offered sufficient evidence of the Standards' procompetitive virtues.
See
NASL,
17-CV-05495, --- F.Supp.3d at ---- - ----,
The Standards further benefit the market by coordinating necessary competition. As the Supreme Court recognized when addressing the National Collegiate Athletic Association's ("NCAA") role in regulating intercollegiate athletics, "this case involves an industry in which horizontal restraints on competition are essential if the product is to be available at all."
Bd. of Regents
,
NASL argues that the District Court erred in finding some of the Standards' requirements justified in part by their procompetitive effects of eliminating free riding and stabilizing the market. However, it is permissible for courts to consider free riding and stability as two potential procompetitive justifications in the standard-setting context.
Eliminating free riders can be a procompetitive advantage of alleged restraints on competition like vertical price agreements.
See
Leegin Creative Leather Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc.
,
Courts can also consider whether evidence of a defendant's stabilizing behavior constitutes a procompetitive benefit of standard-setting. NASL argues that anticompetitive behavior cannot be justified as preventing "[r]uinous competition, financial disaster, [or the] evils of price cutting."
United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co.
,
A defendant cannot, of course, justify anticompetitive arrangements by saying an industry's "special characteristics" warrant them.
Nat'l Soc'y of Prof'l Eng'rs
,
NASL separately argues that the District Court should have concluded NASL was clearly likely to succeed on the merits once the court found problems with the SUM agreement and USSF's early use of the Standards to favor MLS.
NASL
, No. 17-CV-05495, --- F.Supp.3d at ----, ----,
Because USSF has demonstrated procompetitive effects of the Standards, the burden shifts to NASL to prove that "any legitimate competitive benefits offered by [USSF] could have been achieved through less restrictive means."
Am. Express
,
NASL points to the earlier renditions of the Standards as less restrictive alternatives to the current version of the Standards. 15 NASL notes, for example, that the Standards' eight-team requirement for Division II is less restrictive than its current twelve-team requirement. Having fewer requirements generally is less restrictive than having more. But NASL fails to show how reverting to earlier versions of the Standards would achieve the same legitimate procompetitive objectives as the Standards' current form. The Standards' evolution could show simply that its earlier renditions were no longer viable. Growing industries have developing standards; antitrust plaintiffs cannot just point to earlier standards as less restrictive alternatives without additionally showing the equivalent viability of the alternatives proffered.
NASL also urges that eliminating the Standards-using league rules instead of federation rules-is a less restrictive alternative. Again, we fail to see that leagues-based rules would accomplish the same ends as those issued by a federation. As the Supreme Court said of the NCAA's regulating function in intercollegiate sports, "[w]hat the NCAA and its member institutions market in this case is competition itself-contests between competing institutions. Of course, this would be completely ineffective if there were no rules on which the competitors agreed to create and define the competition to be marketed."
Bd. of Regents
,
III
NASL has a case left to make. But we cannot say at this point that NASL has shown a clear likelihood of its success on the merits under
Notes
Individuals with current ties to any professional league cannot be on the Task Forces and must abstain from USSF Board votes on matters relating to the professional leagues.
Amendments proposed in 2015 for Division I, to which NASL objected, never were adopted.
Under the agreement, which was extended for an eight-year term in 2015, SUM guarantees an annual amount of marketing revenue, plus additional revenue if SUM hits monetary targets. The bundling financially benefits both USSF and MLS.
We focus on the status quo rather than the "mandatory" and "prohibitory" terminology because "in borderline cases injunctive provisions containing essentially the same command can be phrased either in mandatory or prohibitory terms."
Int'l Union, United Mine Workers of Am. v. Bagwell
,
The "status quo" in preliminary-injunction parlance is really a "status quo ante."
See
Holt v. Cont'l Grp., Inc.
,
Some of our sister circuits have explicitly incorporated this principle into their formulations of the status quo.
See, e.g.
,
SCFC ILC, Inc. v. Visa USA, Inc.
,
The case might be different if USSF designated NASL a Division II league and revoked that designation mid-season. There, the status quo between the parties arguably would be NASL's Division II designation for that season, in which case we would evaluate NASL's challenge to USSF's revocation under the ordinary standard for a preliminary injunction.
NASL contends that, as an alternative to a showing of a clear or substantial likelihood of success, it can satisfy the higher standard by showing that failure to issue the injunction would result in extreme or very serious damage. It relies on our earlier statement "that a mandatory injunction should issue 'only upon a clear showing that the moving party is entitled to the relief requested, or where extreme or very serious damage will result from a denial of preliminary relief.' "
Tom Doherty
,
The District Court found that NASL had established irreparable harm and that the injunction would not harm the public interest.
NASL
, No. 17-CV-05495, --- F.Supp.3d at ---- - ----, ----,
Because "[t]he question whether an arrangement is a contract, combination, or conspiracy is different from and antecedent to the question whether it unreasonably restrains trade,"
Am. Needle
,
How NASL is challenging the Standards is unclear.
See
A-135 (the District Court, with NASL's later agreement, summarized NASL's position as: "You're saying standards are okay, Division I, Division II is okay; the manner in which [USSF] set[s] the requirements for each is wrong");
see also
A-137 (NASL stating "I'm challenging the requirements here ... that a standard setting body should set [the minimum-team requirement] ... [challenging] [t]hat particular rule"). There is room for disagreement as to whether NASL's reference to the Standards, as "effectuat[ing] the USSF's anticompetitive conspiracy," wages war on the Standards or just fires shots at their role in the larger alleged conspiracy. Compl. ¶ 122.
See
Summit Health, Ltd. v. Pinhas
,
The parties did not, and do not, dispute the rule of reason's applicability.
The District Court found that NASL had not directly shown an actual adverse effect on competition in the market.
NASL
, 17-CV-05495, --- F.Supp.3d at ---- & n.41,
The District Court defined the market as proposed by NASL, and the parties do not contest this definition. In light of that consensus, we regard the relevant market to be the same.
By making this argument, NASL apparently concedes that the earlier Standards had procompetitive justifications.
