OPINION
The National Basketball Association (the “NBA”) and the 27 teams (the “NBA Teams” or “Teams”) that compete in the NBA commenced a declaratory action on June 17,1994 against a class of NBA players as well as prospective NBA players, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201. In particular, the NBA and the Teams seek a declaration that continued implementation of: (1) the college draft; (2) the right of first refusal; and (3) the salary cap does not violate federal antitrust laws. (Am.Compl. ¶ 105). Alternatively, the NBA contends that these measures are not unreasonable restraints of trade and therefore do not violate the antitrust laws. (Am.Compl. ¶ 113).
The same class of players who are defendants in the declaratory judgment claim, along with the National Basketball Players Association (the “NBPA”) (collectively the “Players”), brought counterclaims alleging, in effect, that continuation of these policies are unreasonable restraints of trade not exempt from antitrust law and thereby violate the Sherman Act. (Counterclaims ¶¶43, 47, & 51). Shortly after initiating the counterclaims, the Players moved for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction: (1) to enjoin the Teams from entering into player contracts with current or prospective professional basketball players, and (2) schedule an expedited trial on the merits. On June 28, 1994, the Honorable John F. Keenan granted the temporary restraining order and set a hearing date for the preliminary injunction motion. On July 1, 1994, I was assigned this case, and a hearing was conducted on July 8,1994. At the hearing, I informed the parties that the preliminary injunction hearing would be consolidated with the trial on the merits, pursuant Rule 65(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. A consolidated, factual hearing was conducted on July 12, 1994. 1
BACKGROUND
This ease is the fourth lawsuit initiated by either of the parties as a result of disputes that have arisen during collective bargaining negotiations. Indeed, I am convinced that this is a case where neither party cares about this litigation or the result thereof. Both are simply using the court as a bargaining chip in the collective bargaining process. Each is truly guilty of this practice. 2 A recitation of the history of these lawsuits demonstrates this and puts this litigation in its proper context, ie., a labor dispute that does not belong in litigation.
In 1970, the Players commenced a class action suit against the NBA in the federal district court for the Southern District of New York, challenging certain NBA imposed player restrictions on antitrust grounds.
*1072
The NBA moved for summary judgment, arguing that the practices were shielded from antitrust laws by a labor exemption. The district court denied the NBA’s motion on the ground that the exemption only shields unions and not employers.
Robertson v. National Basketball Ass’n,
In 1976, the parties in Robertson entered, and the district court approved, a settlement agreement. This agreement effected a number of changes in the operation of the NBA, including modification of the college draft and institution of the right of first refusal. (Am.Compl. ¶¶ 63-64). The settlement agreement provided that it would expire at the end of the 1986-1987 NBA season. In addition, it expressly provided that the Players had not waived their right to challenge in court any unilateral imposition of any rule, policy, practice or agreement by the NBA. When the Robertson settlement agreement was adopted in 1976, the Players and the NBA also entered into a multi-year collective bargaining agreement incorporating the substantive terms of the settlement agreement. The 1976 Collective Bargaining Agreement expired on June 1, 1979, and on October 10, 1980, the parties again entered into a multi-year collective bargaining agreement that expressly incorporated the terms of the Robertson settlement agreement, including the college draft and the right of first refusal. (Granik Decl., July 6, 1994, ¶¶ 12-15).
The 1980 agreement expired on June 1, 1982. (1980 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Granik Deck, July 6, 1994, Ex. 2, Art. XXVI). In 1983, the NBA sought for the first time to introduce the salary cap. The NBA contended that such a restriction was necessary because the majority of NBA teams were losing money, due in part, to rising player salaries and benefits. (See Grantham Trial Decl., July 11,1994, ¶¶ 3,13). The players responded by filing a lawsuit challenging the legality of the salary cap. Lanier v. National Basketball Ass’n, 82 Civ. 4935 (S.D.N.Y.). A special master appointed to hear disputes under the Robertson settlement agreement determined that the salary cap would violate the terms of the settlement agreement and, therefore, could not be imposed without a modification of that agreement. (Granik Deck, July 6, 1994, ¶¶ 17-19). The Players and the NBA entered into a Memorandum of Understanding that modified the expired 1980 Collective Bargaining Agreement to include a salary cap, and it continued in force through the end of the 1986-1987 season. (Granik Deck, July 6, 1994, Ex. 3).
On June 8,1987, the NBA and the Players entered into a Moratorium Agreement to facilitate negotiations, whereby the challenged practices would remain in effect but no new contracts would be signed. The Moratorium Agreement expired on October 1, 1987. (Grantham Deck 31 & Ex. A). The day the Moratorium Agreement expired, the Players commenced an action in the District of New Jersey, seeking a ruling that the college draft, the right of first refusal, and the salary cap violated the antitrust laws.
Bridgeman v. National Basketball Ass’n,
The 1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement formally expired on June 23, 1994, the day following the last playoff game of the 1993-1994 NBA playing season. (Grantham Deck, June 26, 1994, ¶ 4). At a formal bargaining session, held in New York on April 7, 1994, the Players demanded that the three disputed employment practices be eliminated. (Grantham Deck, June 26, 1994, ¶¶ 39-40). In a position paper delivered to the NBA at that meeting, the Players expressly stated their view that the college draft, right of first refusal and the salary cap would “be subject to successful challenge under the antitrust laws.” This position was reiterated at a sec *1073 ond formal bargaining session, held on May 4, 1994. (Granik Decl., July 6, 1994, ¶ 83).
On June 15, 1994, in a letter addressed to the NBA, the Players, while asserting that further negotiations would be futile, said that the Players would attend another meeting, but only in late June or mid-July. In that letter, the NBPA again threatened that the NBA’s continuation of the employment conditions at issue would be “subject to scrutiny under the antitrust laws and ... are clearly in violation of those laws.” (Granik Decl., July 6, 1994, ¶ 33). At the preliminary injunction hearing on July 8, 1994, I informed the parties of my belief that this litigation was simply being used as a bargaining chip in the collective bargaining negotiations, and I advised them that the best course of action would be to resolve the dispute through negotiations. (Transcript of Preliminary Injunction Hearing, July 8, 1994, at 8-9). Apparently, the parties did attempt to negotiate, but such efforts were unsuccessful. (Stern Testimony, Tr. at 153).
The Challenged Measures
The College Draft
The college draft is held annually shortly after the NBA season concludes. It is a mechanism in which each team is allotted two selections. A team may exercise its selections or trade them to another team. The order of selection is generally determined by the records of the 27 Teams for the season immediately preceding the draft, i.e., the weaker teams select earlier. In the end, 54 prospective players are selected by the Teams. A player who is selected by a particular team may only negotiate with that team. Any team that negotiates with a player it did not select is severely penalized. Prospective players who are not drafted are free to negotiate with any NBA team. (1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Granik Decl., July 6, 1994, Ex. 5, Art. IV).
The Right of First Refusal
Under the 1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement, the Teams maintain a right of first refusal over players who have played fewer than four seasons or who have not completed at least two contracts. When a player’s contract expires, he is able to negotiate a new contract with any team. If a team has a right of first refusal over that player, however, it may match any offer another team makes. If there is a matching offer, the player may not sign with the new team, and his services are retained by his current team. (1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Granik Deck, July 6, 1994, Ex. 5, Art. V).
The Salary Cap
The salary cap is part of a complex player/owner revenue sharing arrangement in which the Players are guaranteed a percentage of the defined gross revenue of the team. This arrangement also operates as a ceiling on the total amount a team may spend on salaries for its players. As part of this arrangement, each team is also required to pay a minimum amount of salaries to its players (1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Granik Deck', July 6, 1994, Ex. 5, Art. VII, Pt. A, Sec. 1(e) — (f)). The salary cap may be exceeded by a team that wishes to pay a veteran player it currently employs. A team may, however, not exceed the salary cap to acquire a new player. (1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement, Granik Deck, July 6, 1994, Ex. 5, Art. VII, Pt. F).
DISCUSSION
(1) The Nonstatutory Labor Exemption
As a threshold matter, the NBA argues that antitrust law does not apply in this case because a collective bargaining relationship currently exists between the players and the NBA. 3 In particular, the NBA contends *1074 that the nonstatutory labor exemption applies, and therefore, any antitrust claim the Players may seek must fail.
The parties do not dispute that prior to the formal expiration of the Collective Bargaining Agreement on June 23, 1994, the NBA as well as the Players were immune from antitrust claims.
Wood v. National Basketball Ass’n,
In a 1976 case involving player restraints in the National Football League (the “NFL”), the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit analyzed the nonstatutory exemption as it applies to the market for player services and established a three pronged test for application of the exemption.
Mackey v. National Football League,
The dispute here arises because the 1988 Collective Bargaining Agreement has formally expired. The issue is whether antitrust immunity that existed while the Collective Bargaining Agreement was in effect continues after its formal expiration, and if so, for what length of time. I can find only four non-binding decisions addressing this precise issue. Unfortunately, each .decision fashioned a different standard to apply.
The first case to address this issue was
Bridgeman v. National Basketball Ass’n,
The court refused to accept the Players’ contention that antitrust immunity ends at the moment the collective bargaining agreement formally expires.
Id.
at 965. The court noted that such a result would not be consistent with the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 151 et seq. (the “NLRA”).
Id.
Under the NLRA, the owners have an obligation, even after the collective bargaining agreement expires, to bargain fully and in good faith before altering a term or condition of employment that is a mandatory subject of collective bargaining. One can easily imagine the howls to be heard from the Players if the Teams unilaterally terminated medical coverage for them and their families at the formal expiration of the Collective Bargaining Agreement. It is for the good of our entire society that such is not the law.
See
29 U.S.C. § 158(a)(5). The
Bridgeman
court determined that the practical effect of this duty on employers is that the “terms and conditions of employment that are the subject of mandatory bargaining survive expiration of collective bargaining agreement.”
Bridgeman,
The Bridgeman court also found the NBA’s contention that antitrust immunity lasts indefinitely equally unavailing. Id. at 966. In particular, the court reasoned that such a rule would discourage unions from entering into agreements, for fear of forever *1075 binding themselves with restraints that they could not subsequently attack in the courtroom. Id. After considering the elements of the Mackey test, the issue turned on whether the disputed terms will likely become part of a subsequent collective bargaining agreement. Thus, the test that Bridgeman established was that antitrust immunity survives only as long as the employer continues to impose the restrictions unchanged, and reasonably believes that the challenged practice or a close variant of it will be incorporated in the next collective bargaining agreement. Id. at 967.
In
Powell v. National Football League,
Powell
was reversed by the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in
Powell v. National Football League,
(“ Powell II”). Specifically, Powell II held that the nonstatutory labor exemption extends beyond a mere impasse in negotiations and for as long as the labor relationship continues. Id. at 1303-04. The Eighth Circuit reasoned that once a collective bargaining relationship is established, federal labor policies become pre-eminent. As such, labor laws provide the opposing parties with sufficient tools to settle a dispute. For instance, employees may strike, employers may lock players out, and both parties may petition the National Labor Relations Board to prohibit unfair labor practices. Therefore, to provide the union with the ability to sue for treble damages under antitrust law “would ... improperly upset the careful balance established by Congress through the labor law.” Id. at 1302.
The essence of Powell II is that once a collective bargaining arrangement is established, and a valid and bona fide collective bargaining agreement is formed, federal labor law and its policies control. In other words, the disputes that arise from collective bargaining arrangements are labor disputes, and Congress has enacted laws that provide various remedies to these disputes. Id. at 1302-03. As the Eighth Circuit stated:
The labor arena is one with well established rules which are intended to foster negotiated settlements rather than intervention by the courts. The League and the Players have accepted this “level playing field” as the basis for their often tempestuous relationship, and we believe that there is substantial justification for requiring the parties to continue to fight on it, so that bargaining and the exertion of economic force may be used to bring about legitimate compromise. Id. at 1303.
In sum, Powell II effectively held that antitrust immunity exists as long as a collective bargaining relationship exists and labor law remedies are available. Id. at 1303-04. 4
*1076
In
Brown v. Pro Football, Inc.,
This review of the case law establishes that, if nothing else, opinions vary a great deal on this issue. See, e.g., Kieran M. Cor-coran, When Does the Buzzer Sound?: The Nonstatutory Labor Exemption in Professional Sports, 94 Colum.L.Rev. 1045, 1071 (1994) (favoring a standard based on union consent); Ethan Lock, The Scope of the Labor Exemption in Professional Sports, 1989 Duke L.J. 339, 400 (favoring ending the exemption at the formal expiration of the collective bargaining agreement). Obviously, this issue stems from the underlying conflict between antitrust and labor law policies. The issue, at its most basic level, is what role, if any, does antitrust policy play when a valid collective bargaining relationship exists. To find an answer to this question, I believe it is necessary to review the origin of the nonstatutory exemption.
The nonstatutory exemption was created by the Supreme Court to reconcile the conflicting policies between antitrust and labor laws.
[W]e have two declared congressional policies which it is our responsibility to try to reconcile. The one seeks to preserve a competitive business economy; the other to preserve the rights of labor to organize to better its conditions through the agency of collective bargaining. We must determine here how far Congress intended activities under one of these policies to neutralize the results envisioned by the other.
Allen Bradley Co. v. Local Union No. 3, 1BEW,
The genesis of the labor exemption is Allen Bradley. In Allen Bradley, a group of New York City electrical equipment manufacturers and contractors — in furtherance of a broad industry-wide conspiracy to prevent electrical equipment manufacturers located outside of New York from selling their products within the City — entered into various collective bargaining agreements with a New York City union. In the agreements, the contractors agreed to purchase equipment only from local manufacturers, who had entered into closed-shop agreements with the union. In return, the manufacturers agreed to confine their New York City sales to contractors employing the union’s members. Several equipment manufacturers located outside New York City brought an antitrust suit against the union. Id. at 799-800. The Court concluded that the union’s participation in the employers’ conspiracy in restraint of trade was not sufficient to immunize the parties’ agreement from antitrust liability. Id. at 808.
The Supreme Court rendered a similar conclusion in
United Mine Workers of America v. Pennington,
In
Local Union No. 189, Amalgamated Meat Cutters & Butcher Workmen of North America v. Jewel Tea Co.,
In the case at bar, the Players cite these cases for the proposition that union consent, while not always sufficient, is necessary for the labor exemption to apply. Indeed, Mackey’s third element, that the agreement be the product of bona fide arm’s-length bargaining, is derived from the view that
Allen Bradley, Pennington,
and
Jewel Tea
stand for this proposition.
Mackey,
The Players’ reading of these Supreme Court cases is, however, fundamentally flawed. These decisions involve “injuries to
employers
who asserted that they were being excluded from competition in the product market.”
Wood,
From Allen Bradley to Pennington, the majority of the Court has insisted that one factor be present before the Sherman Act applies to arrangements arrived at through collective bargaining: one group of employers must conspire to use the union to hurt their competitors. The line the Court has consistently sought to draw, therefore, is the line between the product market and the labor market.
Michael S. Jacobs
&
Ralph K. Winter, Jr.,
Antitrust Principles and Collective Bargaining by Athletes: Of Superstars in Peonage,
81 Yale L.J. 1, 26 (1971). Thus, to apply the exemption as enunciated in
Allen Bradley, Pennington,
and
Jewel Tea
to disputes between employees and employers in a collective bargaining relationship does not fully account for the policies underlying federal labor law. Moreover, such a ruling would exaggerate federal antitrust concerns.
See Wood,
*1078 Collective bargaining seeks to order labor markets through a system of countervailing power. Thus it is often referred to by economists as bilateral monopoly. If such a structure is to be protected by law, then logically the antitrust claims between employers and employees must be extinguished.
Jacobs & Winter,
Antitrust Principles,
This reasoning mandates that the appropriate standard to apply is the
Powell II
standard. Antitrust immunity exists as long as a collective bargaining relationship exists.
Powell II,
This does not mean that the Players are “stuck” with these provisions forever. Certainly, they can attempt to bargain these provisions away — including exerting economic pressure by means of a strike. Or, the Players may request decertification of the NBPA as a collective bargaining agent. I do not mean by this ruling to encourage the Players to decertify their union so that they may bring an antitrust claim. But, decertifi-cation is certainly an option the Players have. In fact, this is exactly what the National Football League Players Union did following
Powell II. See Powell v. National Football League,
(2) Antitrust Analysis
It appears that even if the nonstatu-tory exemption did not apply, the Players’ charge of a
per se
violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, is insufficient to carry the day. It has often been recognized that any contract between an employer and employee is a restraint of trade.
Chicago Board of Trade v. United States,
Certain agreements, such as horizontal price fixing and market allocation, are thought so inherently anti-competitive that each is illegal per se without inquiry into the harm it has actually caused. Other combinations, such as mergers, joint ventures, and various vertical agreements, hold the promise of increasing a firm’s efficiency and enabling it to compete more effectively. Accordingly, such combinations are judged under a rule of reason, an inquiry into market power and market structure designed to assess the combination’s actual effect.
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp.,
[T]he NFL clubs which have “combined” to implement the draft are not competitors in any economic sense. The clubs operate basically as a joint venture in producing an entertainment product — football games and telecasts. No NFL club can produce this product without agreements and joint action with every other team. To this end, the League not only determines franchise *1079 locations, playing schedules, and broadcast terms, but also ensures that the clubs receive equal shares of telecast and ticket revenues. These economic joint venturers “compete” on the playing field, to be sure, but here as well cooperation is essential if the entertainment product is to attain a high quality: only if the teams are “competitively balanced” will spectator interest be maintained at a high pitch. No NFL team, in short, is interested in driving another team out of business, whether in the counting-house or on the football field, for if the League fails, no one team can survive.
Smith v. Pro Football, Inc.,
The rule of reason, as set forth in
National Soc’y of Professional Engineers v. United States,
Unreasonableness under that test could be based either (1) on the nature or character of the [conduct] or (2) on surrounding circumstances giving rise to the inference or presumption that [it was] intended to restrain trade and enhance prices. Under either branch of the test, the inquiry is confined to a consideration of impact on competitive conditions.
Id. (citations omitted)
Even under a rule of reason analysis, however, it appears that the Players have failed to show that the alleged restraints of trade are on balance unreasonably anti-competitive. The pro-competitive effects of these practices, in particular the maintenance of competitive balance, may outweigh their restrictive consequences. Indeed, the Salary Cap seems to operate as a mechanism to distribute 53 per cent defined gross revenue to the Players. (Tr. at 108-09).
See Mackey,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the NBA and Teams’ continued implementation of the college draft, right of first refusal, and the salary cap is hereby declared not to violate antitrust laws. This ruling mandates that the Players’ counterclaims be denied. Parties are once again urged to pursue the only rational course for the resolution of their disputes; that is, a course of collective bargaining pursued by both sides in good faith. No court, no matter how highly situated, can replace this time honored manner of labor dispute resolution. Rather than clogging the courts with unnecessary litigation, the parties should pursue this course.
Notes
. Counsel for the NBA objected to the shortness of the trial as well as its expedited nature. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure authorize me to order a speedy hearing for a declaratory judgment action. Fed.R.Civ.P. 57. Thus, they cannot be heard to complain about the expedited nature of a case they initiated. In addition, several other reasons exist for speeding this case along. First, the Teams and the Players use this period to sign contracts and prepare for the upcoming season. It would be unfair to allow this litigation to create a legal cloud over contract negotiations. (See Trial Testimony of David J. Stem, July 12, 1994, at 155-60 (hereinafter "Tr.”)). Moreover, the raw facts that underlie this action are not in dispute. The dispute centers on the applicable legal standard. Therefore, the parties simply needed an opportunity to put the facts on the record. The parties had ample time to do so before, during, and after trial. Finally, I received the parties’ papers on July 5, 1994. In such a complicated case that must be resolved quickly, only a judge unwilling to have an open mind would attempt to rule prior to a detailed factual hearing. Therefore, I ordered a trial on the merits for July 11, 1994.
. The initiation of the declaratory judgment action cannot be said to violate Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. It does, however, constitute sharp and shady practices of the type that most ethical lawyers shun.
. In addition to the objection outlined in the text, the NBA objected to the July 11, 1994 trial, contending that jurisdiction did not exist because of the Norris-LaGuardia Act's prohibition against injunctions involving labor disputes.
See
29 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. Putting aside the merits of this dubious proposition,
but see Jackson v. National Football League,
. Senior Judge Heaney dissented in
Powell II
and Chief Judge Lay, along with Judge McMilli-an, dissented from a denial of a rehearing en banc. These dissents argue that
Powell II
will discourage collective bargaining, fails to consider that in order for the exemption to apply union consent is necessary, and encourages union de-certification.
Powell II,
.
Brown
alternatively held that the exemption does not extend past the point of impasse.
Brown,
. On behalf of a concurring panel of three, Justice Goldberg urged a holding that “a union acting as a union, in the interests of its members, and not acting to fix prices or allocate markets in aid of an employer conspiracy to accomplish these objects ... is not subject to challenge under the antitrust laws.”
Jewel Tea,
