MEMORANDUM and ORDER
This action involves the right of plaintiff Gregory P. Neeld, an individual who has sight in only one eye, to have an opportunity to play professional hockey in the American .Hockey League (“the AHL”). Article 13(e) of the AHL’s by-laws provides:
“A player with only one eye, or one of whose eyes has a vision of only three-sixtieths (3-60ths) or under, shall not be eligible to play for a Member Club.”
Plaintiff’s complaint sets forth two causes of action. The first is bottomed on 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The second alleges that the AHL’s and its member teams’ adherence to and enforcement of Article 13(e) is violative of section 296(l)(a) of New York’s Human Rights Law which in pertinent part provides:
“1. It shall be an unlawful discriminatory practice: *461 (a) For an employer * * * because of the * * * disability * * * of any individual, to refuse to hire or employ or to bar or to discharge from employment such individual or to discriminate against such individual in compensation or in terms, conditions or privileges of employment.”
Plaintiff has moved for a preliminary injunction and has submitted a memorandum of law and orally argued in support of his motion. Defendants have submitted a memorandum of law and orally argued in opposition to plaintiff’s request for preliminary relief.
Whether to grant preliminary relief falls decisionally within the discretion of the court.
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
The denial to plaintiff of an opportunity to play professional hockey in the AHL will result in the possibility of irreparable harm to plaintiff’s professional hockey career. A young athlete’s skills diminish and sometimes are irretrievably lost unless he is given an opportunity to practice and refine such skills at a certain level of proficiency. Therefore, plaintiff has shown the possibility of irreparable harm if an injunction pendente lite is not granted. 1
Plaintiff has not established, however, a probability of success on the merits of his section 1983 cause of action. Although plaintiff contends that the state action requirement for a section 1983 action is satisfied because eight of the nine AHL member teams play their home games in stadia owned by various municipalities, such fact alone is insufficient to establish the requisite level of state involvement necessary to state a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Where, as here, discrimination is rooted in private conduct, the state must have significantly involved itself with the invidious discrimination before the constitutional proscription can apply.
Reitman v. Mulkey,
Were plaintiff’s section 1983 cause of action to be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, there would be no pendent jurisdiction over his state cause of action. Pendent jurisdiction can be relied upon only when there is a claim conferring federal jurisdiction that will survive a motion to dismiss.
United Mine Workers
v.
Gibbs,
With respect to plaintiff’s cause of action under the New York Human Rights Law, plaintiff has established a probability of success on the merits. Under such law, blindness is a disability against which an employer may not discriminate unless sight in one or both eyes is shown to be a bona fide occupational qualification.
Cf., Defini and Wohl
v.
Home Lines Agency, Inc.,
Nos. CPD-38522-75 and CPD-37985-75 (N.Y. State Division of Human Rights, April 27, 1976),
aff’d,
Appeal No. 3491 (Appeal Board, May 12, 1977). Plaintiff has represented that his visual handicap does not substantially detract from his skill and ability to play hockey in a competent and proficient manner. Defendants have not as yet justified Article 13(e) as being a bona fide occupational qualification.
2
In addition, a person who is partially or totally blind has a constitutional right not to be discriminated against by an employer or prevented from participating in a college sports program because of his or her visual impairment.
Gurmankin
v.
Costanzo,
Having found that plaintiff has shown the possibility of irreparable harm and probability of success on the merits as to his state cause of action, it is unnecessary to discuss the other tests for issuance of a preliminary injunction.
It is therefore hereby
ORDERED that the AHL is preliminarily enjoined from applying Article 13(e) of the AHL by-laws to plaintiff within the State of New York; and it is further
ORDERED that the AHL member franchises located within the State of New York are preliminarily enjoined from applying Article 13(e) of the AHL by-laws to plaintiff.
Notes
. It is not a sufficient answer that plaintiff, if wronged, can be made whole by a monetary award. The road to such award is hazardous with undulations of expert testimony and surmise and speculation.
. Plaintiff’s competing for a position on an AHL team will somewhat demonstrate whether his loss of sight in one eye reduces sufficiently his ability as a hockey player so that such may be classified as a bona fide occupational qualification.
