The plaintiff, Speakers of Sport, appeals from the grant of summary judgment to the defendant, ProServ, in a diversity suit in which one sports agency has charged another with tortious interference with a business relationship and related violations of Illinois law. The essential facts, construеd as favorably to the plaintiff as the record will permit, are as follows. Ivan Rodriguez, a highly successful catcher with the Texas Rangers baseball team, in 1991 signed the first of several one-year contracts making Speakers his agent. Pro-Serv wanted to expand its representation of baseball players and to this end invited Rodriguez to its office in Washington and there promised that it would get him between $2 and $4 million in endorsements if he signed with ProServ — which he did, terminating his contract (which was terminable at will) with Speakers. This was in 1995. ProServ failed to obtain significant endorsement for Rodriguеz and after just one year he switched to another agent who the following year landed him a five-year $42 million contract with the Rangers. Speakers brought this suit a few months later, charging that the promise of endorsements that ProServ had made to Rodriguez was fraudulent and had induced 'him to terminate his contract with Speakers.
The parties agree that the substantive issues in this diversity suit are governed by Illinois law, and we do not look behind such agreements so long as they are reasonable,
Spinozzi v. ITT Sheraton Corp.,
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Speakers could not sue Rodriguez for breach of contract, because he had not broken their contract, which was, as we said, terminable at will. Nor, therefore, could it accuse ProServ of inducing a breаch of contract, as in
J.D. Edwards & Co. v. Podany,
There is in general nothing wrong with one sports agent trying to take a client from another if this сan be done without precipitating a breach of contract. That is the process known as competition, which though painful, fierce, frequently ruthless, sometimes Darwinian in its pitilessness, is the cornerstone of our highly successful economic system. Competition is not a tort,
Keeble v. Hickeringill,
11 East. 574, 103 Eng. Rep. 1127 (K.B. 1706 or 1707);
Frandsen v. Jensen-Sundquist Agency, Inc.,
There would be few more effеctive inhibitors of the competitive process than making it a tort for an agent to promise the client of another agent to do better by him,
Triangle Film Corp. v. Artcraft Pictures Corp.,
This threat to the competitive process is blocked by the рrinciple of Illinois law that promissory fraud is not actionable unless it is part of a scheme to defraud, that is, unless it is one element of a pattern of fraudulent acts.
HPI Health Care Services, Inc. v. Mt. Vernon Hospital, Inc.,
Criticized for vagueness, e.g.,
id.
at 1354;
Stamatakis Industries, Inc. v. King,
The promise of endorsements was puffing not in the most common sense of a cascade of extravagant adjеctives but in the equally valid sense of a sales pitch that is intended, and that a reasonable person in the position of the “promisee” would understand, to be aspirational rather than enforceable — an expression of hope rather than a commitment. It is not as if Prо-Serv proposed to employ Rodriguez and pay him $2 million a year. That would be the kind of promise that could found an enforceable obligation. ProServ proposed merely to get him endorsements of at least that amount. They would of course be paid by the comрanies whose products Rodriguez endorsed, rather than by Pro-Serv. ProServ could not force them to pay Rodriguez, and it is not contended that he understood ProServ to be warranting a minimum level of endorsements in the sense that if they were not forthcoming ProServ would be legally obligatеd to make up the difference to him.
It is possible to make a binding promise of something over which one has no control; such a promise is called a warranty.
Aik-Tech Telecom, Inc. v. Amway Corp., supra,
It can be argued, however, that competition can be tortious even if it does not involve an actionable fraud (which in Illinois would not include a fraudulent promise) or other independently tortious act, such as defamation, or trademark or patent infringement, or a theft of a trade secret; that competitors should not be allowed to use “unfair” tactics; and thаt a promise known by the promisor when made to be unfulfillable is such a tactic, especially when used on a relatively unsophisticated, albeit very well to do, baseball player. Considerable support for this view can be found in the case law. E.g., Yoa
kum v. Hartford Fire Ins.
Co.,
Invoking the concept of “wrongful by reason of ... an established standard of a trade or profession,” Speakers points to a rule of major league baseball forbidding players’ agents to compete by means of misrepresentations. The rule is designed tо protect the players, rather than their agents, so that even if it established a norm enforceable by law Speakers would not be entitled to invoke it; it is not a rule designed for Speakers’ protection. In any event its violation would not be the kind of “wrongful” conduct that should trigger the tort of intentional interference; it would not be a violation of law.
It remains to consider Speakers’ claim that ProServ violated the Illinois
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Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, 815 ILCS 505/1
et seq.
Speakers is not a consumer, and while a competitor is permitted to bring suit under the Act as a representative of the consumer interest (an example would be a ease in which a multitude of consumers had been deceived by a competitor and their individual losses were too small to warrant the costs of suit), he must “prove, by clear and convincing evidence, how the complained-of conduct implicates consumer protection concerns.”
Brody v. Finch University of Health Sciences,
Thе seller can be hurt even if the customer is not; but to allow the seller to obtain damages from a competitor when no consumer has been hurt is unlikely to advance the consumer interest. Allowing Speakers to prevail would hurt consumers by reducing the vigor of competition betwеen sports agents. The Rodriguezes of this world would be disserved, as Rodriguez himself, a most reluctant witness, appears to believe. Anyway, we don’t think that the kind of puffing in which ProServ engaged amounts to an unfair method of competition or an unfair act or practice. The Illinois legislaturе borrowed these terms from section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45, and has instructed the courts (815 ILCS 505/2) to conform the meaning of the terms to the meaning they bear in section 5, a provision designed to advance antitrust policy, e.g.,
FTC v. Motion Picture Advertising Co.,
We add that even if Speakers could establish liability under either the common law of torts or the deceptive practices act, its suit would fail because it cannot possibly establish, as it seeks to do, a damages entitlement (the only relief it seeks) to the agent’s fee on Rodriguez’s $42 million contract. That contract was negotiated years after he left Speakers, and by another agent. Since Rodriguez had only a year-to-year contract with Speakers' — terminable at will, moreover— and since obviously he was dissаtisfied with Speakers at least to the extent of switching to ProServ and then when he became disillusioned with ProServ of
not
returning to Speakers’ fold, the likelihood that Speakers would have retained him had ProServ not lured him away is too slight to ground an award of such damages. See
Haudrich v. Howmedica, Inc.,
Affirmed.
