1981-2 Trade Cases 64,393
The UNITED STATES TROTTING ASSOCIATION, an Ohio non-profit
corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CHICAGO DOWNS ASSOCIATION, INC., Fox Valley Trotting Club,
Inc., and Illinois Harness Horsemen's Association,
Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 80-1948 to 80-1950.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Sept. 10, 1981.
Decided Dec. 8, 1981.
A. Vernon Carnahan, New York City, for plaintiff-appellant.
Thomas D. Nash, Jr., Chicago, Ill., Dominic H. Frinzi, Milwaukee, Wis., for defendants-appellees.
Before CUMMINGS, Chief Judge, and PELL, SPRECHER, BAUER, WOOD and CUDAHY, Circuit Judges, en banc.
CUMMINGS, Chief Judge.
Plaintiff United States Trotting Association (USTA) brought these three actions against Chicago Downs Association, Inc. and Fox Valley Trotting Club, Inc., alleging that they had unlawfully appropriated USTA's property. The three actions were consolidated in the district court and remain consolidated here.
In the first suit (district court number 77-C-3312; our number 80-1948) USTA alleged that Chicago Downs, an Illinois management corporation that sponsors race meetings at Sportsman's Park, a harness race track in Cicero, Illinois, used USTA registration and eligibility certificates during 1975 and 1977 when Chicago Downs was not affiliated with USTA and thereby unlawfully appropriated USTA's property. In the second suit (district court number 77-C-3313; our number 80-1949) USTA made the same allegation against Fox Valley, another Illinois management corporation sponsoring harness horse-racing meetings at Sportsman's Park, with respect to meetings conducted in 1975 and 1977. Both suits sought an accounting, a money judgment and an injunction against continuing misappropriation. USTA's third suit (district court number 78-C-1258; our number 80-1950) sought to enjoin Fox Valley from using USTA certificates during and after the 1978 racing season.
Fox Valley filed an answer and then a counterclaim in the third of the suits. Count I of its counterclaim charged USTA with instigating a group boycott against it in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Count II charged USTA with tortiously interfering with the contractual and business relations between Fox Valley and the Illinois Harness Horsemen's Association (IHHA).1
Conceding for the time being that there were no material factual issues in dispute, the parties filed motions for summary judgment on all issues. The district court granted defendants' motion for summary judgment on USTA's misappropriation claim because USTA had failed to show that it owned the registration and eligibility certificates.
I. Background of Litigation
USTA is an Ohio incorporated, non-profit service organization. It was founded in 1939 to counteract widespread problems in harness racing. Before that time a plethora of local sanctioning organizations had produced inconsistent regulations; record-keeping was spotty; penalties proved unenforceable; and the sport had fallen into general disrepute. The purpose of USTA was to develop comprehensive national records and to promulgate uniform rules and standards. USTA has never had any interest in breeding, buying, selling, or racing horses, nor any investment in race tracks or race meetings. It operates solely as a sanctioning organization and information bank. Since its inception, USTA has grown in size and influence. In 1977 it had 40,861 active members,3 including 426 fair race tracks and 65 parimutuel tracks. Only members can register standardbred horses with the USTA and obtain eligibility certificates documenting a horse's performance in a given racing season. Only members can vote on matters of USTA governance. Nonetheless, tracks that do not wish to become USTA members can affiliate as "contract tracks," paying to use USTA services on the same basis as member tracks, i.e., a percentage of the parimutuel take for each racing day, not in excess of $330 per day. See United States Trotting Association Charter, By-Laws, Rules, and Regulations ("Rules") Art. I, § 4 and Art. VII, § 1.
Owner members of USTA register their standardbred horses with USTA. USTA issues a registration certificate to the owner that describes in detail the horse's physical markings and pedigree, and identifies its owner and breeder. The reverse side of the certificate provides space to record any transfers of ownership of the horse. In addition, USTA maintains central records of the information on the registration certificates and of any transfers of title, so that attempts to tamper with the certificates can be detected.
USTA also issues an eligibility certificate for each registered horse. This certificate contains performance information compiled from the horse's last eight starts in the prior racing season. Throughout the current season, pertinent information about the horse's performance in each of its races is added to the certificate by the clerk of the racecourse, a track employee who is licensed by USTA. The clerk of the course also records the same information on a "Judge's Sheet" which is forwarded to USTA, thus making it possible to detect discrepancies or alterations in the eligibility certificates.
Eligibility certificates are used by track officials to select competitive horses for balanced race fields. Registration certificates are chiefly important in insuring accurate identification and honest transfers of harness horses. They also play a limited role in actual racing activities. Many tracks, including Chicago Downs and Fox Valley, run "claiming races," in which a price is established at which the winning horse can be purchased or "claimed." Such tracks, including Chicago Downs and Fox Valley, require that the USTA registration certificate be surrendered to the new owner before the claiming amount is disbursed. The purpose of the claiming race is to keep owners from entering superior horses in mediocre fields, again to foster competitive races.
In Illinois the legislature has relied on the offices of USTA as an integral part of its regulatory scheme. Illinois law requires that all horses entering harness races be "registered as (harness or standardbred horses) with and meet ( ) the requirements of and (be) approved by the United States Trotting Association." Ill.Rev.Stat.chap. 8 § 37-3.06(c) (1979). In addition the Illinois Racing Board Rules provide that any harness horse entered at a parimutuel track have a current USTA eligibility certificate (Rule 9.01), that all matters relating to registration of harness horses be governed by USTA rules (Rule 9.02), that all horses be tattooed with their USTA identification number (Rule 7.08), that persons suspended by USTA be barred from participating in harness race meetings (Rule 5.10), and that clerks of the course send race information to USTA and the Illinois Racing Board (Rule 6.18). The thirteen other states that allow parimutuel harness racing have similarly incorporated USTA standards in their regulatory systems (App. 304-305).
During the 1975, 1977, and subsequent racing seasons,4 neither Chicago Downs nor Fox Valley joined USTA as a regular member or contracted to buy USTA's services. Both continued to hold races with USTA-registered horses and to use the information contained on USTA registration and eligibility certificates. Both continued to provide USTA with information about racing performances by forwarding Judge's Sheets to USTA headquarters. Each of the defendants thus enjoyed a paradigmatic "free ride," receiving all of the benefits of USTA affiliation with none of the attendant costs.
In an effort to put an end to this free riding, USTA announced to its members its intention to invoke certain sanctions.5 It would henceforth, it said, provide no services to Fox Valley and Chicago Downs. Nor would it enter in its records information about racing performances at the defendants' meets. Finally, it directed its members' attention to Rules 5 and 17 of its by-laws. The USTA eligibility certificate application states that members are prohibited from racing horses at meets sponsored by organizations that are not USTA members or contract tracks. Members who violate this prohibition are subject to revocation of their eligibility certificates and may be precluded from obtaining certificates for future racing seasons. Rule 5, § 1. Furthermore, USTA member drivers who drive horses at unaffiliated tracks can be fined up to $100 for each infraction. Rule 17, § 5. These rules are necessary, USTA asserts, to protect its system of racing information "from those who might act to undermine it" and to ensure the "integrity of (its) data system" (Br. 14). The rules were upheld as reasonable restraints in United States v. United States Trotting Association, 1960 CCH
II. USTA's Misappropriation Claim
In its first two complaints USTA contended that defendants had misappropriated its records and services, particularly its registration and eligibility certificates, and therefore sought an accounting, money judgments and injunctive relief. After defendants filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground that the certificates were the property of the horse owners to whom issued, USTA filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the ground that its affidavits and exhibits showed that defendants were liable for misappropriation of plaintiff's property. The district court held that USTA had failed to persuade it that USTA owned the registration and eligibility certificates and therefore granted defendants' motion for summary judgment, stating that "USTA has established no proprietary interest in the certificates or the information contained therein."
In support of affirmance defendants contend that USTA's cross-motion for summary judgment precludes it from now claiming that there are certain disputed questions of fact. But the filing of a cross-motion for summary judgment does not prevent a plaintiff from contending on appeal that there is a dispute as to material facts. Case & Co., Inc. v. Board of Trade of City of Chicago,
The eligibility certificates have the following legend on their face:
This eligibility certificate and the information contained on it are the property of USTA and all rights to its use and reproduction are reserved by it. Use of this certificate and the information contained hereon is restricted to members of USTA and tracks contracting with the Association and only for the purposes of entering, classifying and identifying the horse named hereon and for recording its performances. Permission for any other use of this certificate and the information contained on it or for its use by any other person or organization must be obtained from USTA.6
In deciding that this language did not raise an inference of ownership, the district court found that "th(e) expression of ownership is negated by the adhesive nature of the contract between horsemen and USTA."
The adhesion argument has also been recently rejected in a challenge to a forum selection clause in the USTA by-laws. In language equally applicable here the court said:
Plaintiffs assert that the USTA has successfully achieved its goal of regulating the entire harness racing industry, and that by virtue of its control of the sport, membership in the USTA is, practically speaking, compulsory for all who wish to compete in the United States and Canada. Thus, plaintiffs argue, the forum clause is in reality part of a "contract of adhesion" to which they did not freely assent. But, even assuming the accuracy of their description of the USTA's power, plaintiffs' contention that the by-law is thus unenforceable as a matter of contract law * * * cannot be accepted. This is not a situation where the court is asked to enforce a highly prejudicial term in a contract between two parties of significantly different bargaining power, which term is to the benefit of the stronger and the detriment of the weaker. Plaintiffs have entered into a contract with their fellow members, who adopted the instant by-law for their mutual benefit. Collectively, they retain the power to change it. Cases concerning overwhelming bargaining power in a commercial context are simply inapposite. Moreover, plaintiffs' argument proves too much, for it would vitiate every by-law of a host of membership associations.
Cruise v. Castleton, Inc.,
USTA ownership of the registration certificates presents more difficult issues. Unlike the eligibility certificates, the registration certificates do not contain an explicit affirmation of USTA ownership. Once issued by USTA, registration certificates remain in the possession of the horseowner, except when they are temporarily sent to USTA to record transfers of title. Judge Aspen likened the registration certificates to certificates of registration of motor vehicle ownership.
In sum, USTA is entitled to an accounting, damages and an injunction on the misappropriation claim based on the eligibility certificates. USTA may also be able to adduce further facts to support its ownership claims in the registration certificates.9 Even if it cannot, however, judgment for defendants "should not be construed as suggesting that USTA is not entitled to reimbursement for the services it provides to nonmember tracks."
III. Fox Valley's Antitrust Claim
In the third of the suits consolidated here, Fox Valley filed a counterclaim alleging that USTA's threatened enforcement of its Rules 5 and 17 would be a group boycott, per se violative of Section 1 of the Sherman Act (15 U.S.C. § 1) which declares illegal "every contract, combination * * *, or conspiracy in restraint of commerce among the several States * * *."10 Judge Aspen granted summary judgment for Fox Valley and permanently enjoined USTA from "preventing its members from racing at tracks which are not USTA members or have not paid USTA a specified fee."
"(T)he rule of reason (is) the standard traditionally applied for the majority of anticompetitive practices challenged under § 1 of the Act." Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc.,
The Supreme Court has found certain group boycotts per se illegal. See, e.g., Fashion Originators' Guild of America, Inc. v. FTC,
As Smith also teaches, however, "(A per se rule) should not be applied, and has never been applied by the Supreme Court, to concerted refusals that are not designed to drive out competitors but to achieve some other goal."
"The term 'group boycott' * * * is in reality a very broad label for divergent types of concerted activity. To outlaw certain types of business conduct merely by attaching the 'group boycott' and 'per se' labels obviously invites the chance that certain types of reasonable concerted activity will be proscribed." Mackey v. National Football League,
Here the attributes of per se invalidity discernible in Klor's and Fashion Originators' Guild are not present. There is concerted activity only in the sense that USTA is a membership organization enforcing rules contained in its by-laws. There is no showing of a purpose to exclude competitors. At the most obvious level, Fox Valley had no intention of setting up an organization to rival USTA, and USTA was not Fox Valley's competitor in the business of organizing harness race meetings. There is no indication either of any subtler scheme, as for example groups of drivers or owners using USTA as a means to eliminate other drivers or owners, or certain tracks combining behind the facade of USTA to drive Fox Valley out of business. There is a strong showing, to the contrary, that USTA was organized to ensure honest harness racing rather than to impose a "naked restraint of trade with no purpose except stifling of competition." White Motor Co. v. United States,
Nor have the courts had the kind of experience with organizations like USTA that would warrant extending the per se rule to this case. Except in the rare instances where conduct is unambiguously anticompetitive,12 this lack of experience should lead us to inquire into the nature and idiosyncracies of a particular enterprise before we assign a label to its conduct. One indication of the inconcinnity between the state of our knowledge and the certitude of the per se rule is the extent to which the rule minimizes USTA's free-rider problems.13 If Fox Valley can enjoy the benefits of affiliation with USTA and pay nothing, or pay only when a court orders it to do so, it has no incentive to do otherwise. And it can count on the breadth of USTA membership and on the relationship between USTA and state racing boards to keep USTA afloat for some time despite its (and other tracks') free-riding attempts. In treating USTA's efforts to forestall this result as per se violative of the Sherman Act, the district court forecloses all justifications USTA might make, perhaps without achieving any procompetitive result.
There is a second, independent basis for our holding that USTA's conduct should have been evaluated under the rule of reason. While defendants rely on Silver v. New York Stock Exchange,
In summary USTA's efforts to apply its Rules 5 and 17 should be tested under the rule of reason, either because sporting activities and organizations are entitled to a fuller form of antitrust analysis in recognition of their need for self-regulation, or because the conduct at issue here is not within the undeniably anticompetitive per se boycott paradigm. As we recently stated in Lektro-Vend Corporation v. The Vendo Company,
It is by now well established that any rule of reason analysis requires a showing of anticompetitive market effect. To hold otherwise would ignore the very purpose of the antitrust laws which were enacted for the protection of competition, not competitors.
See also Quality Auto Body, Inc. v. Allstate Insurance Company,
IV. Fox Valley's Claim of Tortious Interference with
Contract and Business Relations
Count II of Fox Valley's counterclaim and supplemental counterclaim alleged that USTA's letters to its members,15 warning that racing information would not be supplied to or recorded from Fox Valley and that Rules 5 and 17 would in future be enforced, amounted to tortious interference with the contract and business relations existing between Fox Valley and the Illinois Harness Horsemen's Association.16 The district court granted summary judgment for Fox Valley on Count II, but the decision must be reversed and remanded.
As Judge Aspen noted, the elements of a tortious interference claim are:
the existence of a valid business relationship (not necessarily evidenced by an enforceable-contract) or expectancy; knowledge of the relationship or expectancy on the part of the interferer; an intentional interference inducing or causing a breach or termination of the relationship or expectancy; and resultant damage to the party whose relationship or expectancy has been disrupted.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith; costs to appellant.17
CUDAHY, Circuit Judge, concurring in part, dissenting in part:
I agree that, with respect to the misappropriation claims, summary judgment in favor of defendants must be reversed. I do not agree, however, that USTA is entitled to summary judgment in its favor with regard to the eligibility certificates. "An essential predicate of the USTA's misappropriation claim is proof of its ownership of the certificate in question, or, more precisely, the information contained on those certificates." U.S. Trotting Ass'n v. Chicago Downs Ass'n, Inc.,
It is well established that USTA has a protectible property interest in the information contained on the eligibility certificates only if that information was acquired as "the result of organization and the expenditure of (USTA) labor, skill and money." Int'l News Service v. Associated Press,
On the other hand, USTA claims a protectible property interest in the certificates by virtue of its centralized record-keeping system and its consequent ability to control the accuracy, and to police misuse, of the information supplied by racetracks. USTA also argues that all incidents of ownership of the certificates, including exclusive possession, would remain with USTA were it not for the Association's carefully circumscribed issuance of the certificate to member horseowners after submission and review of a proper application. In view of these competing factual considerations, I would remand this issue, together with the registration certificate claim, for trial.
In all other respects I concur in the majority opinion.
BAUER, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment of the district court.
* I do not believe that USTA has proved in the district court, or in this court, that it owns the eligibility and registration certificates. The undisputed record reveals that the horse owners, not USTA, retain possession of the registration and eligibility certificates. In its cross-motion for summary judgment, USTA failed to advance evidence sufficient to rebut the presumption of ownership that arises from possession. Mori v. Chicago Nat'l Bank,
Horse owner members of USTA pay yearly membership dues of $20.00. They pay an additional fee of from $15.00 to $100.00 to register a horse, whereupon USTA issues a registration certificate to the owner. The owner retains possession of the certificate until the horse is sold, then the certificate passes to the new owner. At the time of sale, the new owner signs the certificate and returns it to USTA. USTA records the transfer in its permanent record and returns the certificate to the new owner who retains possession of it until any further transfer.
I agree with the district court that the registration certificate "seem(s) to function as something akin to a 'title,' at least insofar as 'it will be relied upon by purchasers and will pass from hand to hand with each change of ownership.' Howard v. National French Draft Horse Association,
Similarly, the horse owner retains sole possession of the eligibility certificate, which is issued annually for a fee of $5.00. He carries it with him from track to track. At the end of the racing season, the horse owner discards the eligibility certificate. In fact, the application for the certificate specifically admonishes members not to return the certificate to USTA.
USTA seeks to bolster its argument concerning ownership of the eligibility certificates by relying on the language printed on the face of the certificate which provides:
(t)his eligibility certificate and the information contained on it are the property of USTA and all rights to its use or reproduction are reserved by it.
In essence, USTA argues that it owns the eligibility certificate because it owns the information recorded on it.
USTA has a protectible property interest in the information contained on the certificate only if the information was acquired as "the result of organization and the expenditure of (USTA) labor, skill and money." Int'l News Service v. Associated Press,
Notwithstanding USTA's failure to expend its "labor, skill and money" in the acquisition and recording of the information on the certificate, USTA maintains that it owns the certificate because the information recorded on it is central to USTA's system of recordkeeping. The record reveals, however, that USTA's system of recordkeeping relies on the information it receives from the tracks on the Judge's Sheets. USTA could not rely on the information recorded on the eligibility certificate because USTA never sees the certificate after it is issued to the horse owner. Like the district court, I remain "unconvinced, however, that the term 'ownership' properly characterizes USTA's regulatory interest in the information contained in the certificate."
The statement on the face of the certificate purporting to identify USTA's ownership of the information and the certificate does not aid USTA in establishing its claim of ownership, for, as the district court found, the "expression of ownership is negated by the adhesive nature of the contract between horsemen and USTA." Id. at 1014. Illinois law requires that all horses racing on Illinois tracks must have eligibility certificates issued by USTA. Ill. Racing Bd. Rule 9.01. USTA will issue an eligibility certificate only if the horse owner is a USTA member. Horse owners applying for USTA membership in order to purchase eligibility certificates are in no position to bargain over the expression of USTA ownership contained on the certificate. "As a result, this provision on the eligibility certificate provides no basis for deciding that USTA owns those certificates."
The undisputed evidence in the record supports the district court's conclusion that USTA does not own the certificates and, therefore, lacks a protectible interest in them. Accordingly, I would affirm the district court order granting defendants-appellees' motion for summary judgment on USTA's misappropriation claim.
II
The majority contends that the rule of reason, rather than the per se boycott rule, is the proper standard of analysis for this case. I disagree.
First, the majority claims that the district court erred in failing to review USTA's conduct pursuant to the rule of reason because courts lack sufficient experience with sporting associations to conclude that their restrictive membership rules are per se unlawful. The majority, however, misapprehends the nature of a court's inquiry. The issue is not whether the courts have sufficient experience with the defendant's type of business. Rather, in determining whether a per se rule applies, the relevant inquiry is limited to ascertaining whether the courts have sufficient experience with the type of restraint to decide that the practice has a "pernicious effect on competition" and lacks "any redeeming virtue." Northern Pac. R. Co. v. United States,
The majority next argues that the per se rule does not apply in this case because the concerted refusal to deal was not directed at USTA's horizontal competitor. This definition of "group boycott" is far too restrictive. Group boycott "refers to a method of pressuring a party with whom one has a dispute by withholding, or enlisting others to withhold, patronage or services from the target." St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Barry,
Finally, the majority contends that the district court should have applied the rule of reason because USTA's conduct was exempted from per se analysis by Silver v. New York Stock Exchange,
The early cases also foreclose the argument that because of the special characteristics of a particular industry, monopolistic arrangements will better promote trade and commerce than competition .... That kind of argument is properly addressed to Congress and may justify an exemption from the statute for specific industries, but it is not permitted by the Rule of Reason.
Nat'l Soc'y of Professional Eng'rs v. United States,
USTA informed its member horse owners and drivers that it would enforce its sanctions against them if they participated in the Fox Valley meet. If the district court had not enjoined USTA from enforcing its rules, Fox Valley would have been forced to accede to USTA's request that it become a member or an affiliate or risk not having a field of competitors. This is precisely the type of group enlisted pressure that the Supreme Court included within the definition of "boycott" set forth in St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Barry,
III
Count II of Fox Valley's counterclaim alleged that USTA's boycott tortiously interfered with the contract and business relations existing between Fox Valley and the Illinois Harness Horsemen's Association. I agree with the majority that USTA's actions did not harm Fox Valley because the district court's injunction prevented USTA from proceeding as planned. I would not order the district court to lift the injunction, however, because I believe that USTA has tortiously interfered with the business relationship between Fox Valley and the IHHA.
The district court could reasonably infer from the two letters that USTA mailed to member horsemen that USTA knew of the agreement between Fox Valley and the IHHA. USTA claims that it informed the horsemen of its intention to invoke the sanction of its restrictive membership rules in order to preserve the integrity of its records system, "not on a malicious desire to interfere with Fox Valley's business arrangements." Appellants' br. at 47-48 (footnotes omitted). Although USTA may have invoked the boycott of Fox Valley in order to preserve the integrity of its records system, its conduct was not justified because USTA had no interest in the certificates to protect. Its conduct was nothing more than a naked restraint of trade to induce its member horsemen to breach their contract with Fox Valley by not racing in the Fox Valley meet.
IV
For the reasons stated in this opinion, I would affirm the judgment of the district court. Accordingly, I dissent.
Notes
IHHA was joined as a party defendant and filed a brief here favoring affirmance. It is described in Count II of Fox Valley's counterclaim as "the representative of all owners, trainers and drivers participating in harness racing at Sportsman's Park." IHHA's answer to USTA's amended complaint states further that it represents "all owners, trainers and drivers participating in harness racing in Illinois" and that "(a)ll members of IHHA ... are also members of USTA." It is not a competitor of USTA
The National Association of State Racing Commissioners, the Canadian Trotting Association, the Kentucky Harness Racing Commission, the Michigan Harness Horsemen's Association, and the Northeastern Harness Horsemen Association. They have asserted that USTA's records and services are vital to the integrity of this sport
Membership in USTA is open to horseowners, breeders, drivers, track officials, state racing officials, and organizations that sponsor harness race meetings, whether parimutuel or not. Management organizations, like Fox Valley and Chicago Downs, that sponsor race meetings at tracks are considered "race tracks" and may join USTA as members or affiliate as contract tracks
In 1976 both defendants paid USTA for its services. Since the commencement of this litigation, USTA has been enjoined from enforcing its by-laws to obtain payment, and the defendants have deposited with the court the amounts that may be found to be due USTA
Letters from William R. Hilliard, Secretary of USTA, dated 1 July 1977 (Chicago Downs), 8 July 1977 (Fox Valley), 6 April 1978 (Fox Valley), 9 May 1979 (Fox Valley). See App. 318-321
The eligibility certificates also bear at the top and bottom the legend " CR The United States Trotting Association 1960." For the first time on appeal defendants argue that if the information on the eligibility certificates is copyrightable, then any state-law misappropriation claim is pre-empted by federal copyright law. On the other hand, if the information is not copyrightable, defendants assert that USTA has violated 17 U.S.C. § 506(c), which makes it a crime to place a notice of copyright on a work with intent to deceive. (Br. 29-32)
There are short answers to defendants' arguments. First the legend refers to the form itself, which contains sufficient indicia of creative authorship to be copyrightable. See the recent statement of Copyright Office policy and summary of case law at 45 Fed.Reg. 63297 (Sept. 24, 1980). Second USTA does not claim copyright protection-and as a practical matter could not do so-for each new item of information that is entered on the certificates in the course of a racing season. Rather it argues that the certificates are its property, which defendants have tortiously taken. Third USTA could, and apparently does, claim copyright protection for the compilations of information it makes itself. See Schroeder v. William Morrow & Co.,
In a related case, Judge McGarr refused to hold that the USTA eligibility certificates were the property of the individual horsemen. Illinois Harness Horsemen's Association v. United States Trotting Association, No. 77 C 3014 (N.D.Ill. August 29, 1977), Tr. 25
The amicus brief of the Michigan Harness Horsemen's Association at 5 notes that in most States the government does in fact own registration certificates and instances Mich. CLA 257.259(a) as typical legislation
We do not agree with the position taken in the partial dissent, pages 791-792 infra, that factual issues remain to be resolved as to both types of certificates. The language on the eligibility certificates, if (as we hold) it is not tainted by adhesion, is a clear statement of ownership. Furthermore, although the officials who enter performance information on the eligibility certificates are racetrack employees, they are also all licensed by USTA. Most important, the information gleaned from performances at individual tracks is relatively useless. When the tracks use eligibility certificates to schedule balanced and competitive races, they are relying on the accuracy of data recorded at other race meetings by other USTA-licensed officials. Only USTA is in a position to collect all the data and police its misuse. The tracks have relied on the doctrine of International News Service v. Associated Press,
Although the counterclaim also cited Section 2 of the Sherman Act (15 U.S.C. § 2), Fox Valley has not relied on that provision in this Court
St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Barry,
We hold that the term "boycott" is not limited to concerted activity against insurance companies or agents or, more generally, against competitors of members of the boycotting group.
The Court made clear, however, that "the issue before us is whether the conduct in question involves a boycott, not whether it is per se unreasonable." Id. at 542,
The cases cited by the dissent, page 794 infra, are illustrative. Some of them antedate the per se rule's application to boycotts, but all of them involve conduct that can only be anticompetitive. The list includes: cartelization to require acceptance of a standard form contract (Paramount Famous Lasky Corp. v. United States,
The Supreme Court first gave free-riding serious attention in the Sylvania case, supra,
The exception was recognized in McCreery Angus Farms v. American Angus Ass'n,
See note 5 supra
See note 1 supra
Circuit Rule 18 shall govern
The majority attempts to deny the significance of these facts by arguing that "the information gleaned from performances at individual tracks is relatively useless," ante at 787 n. 9, and asserting that it is the aggregation of that information that defendants have misappropriated. Even accepting the validity of this analysis, however, summary judgment in favor of USTA is unjustified. The record indicates that aside from its licensing authority, USTA plays virtually no role in aggregating the information relied upon by the defendant race tracks. Rather, this information-supplied by individual track employees-is aggregated on the eligibility certificates themselves, which remain in the possession of the horseowners throughout the racing season. USTA merely receives copies of the information entered on the certificates after each race; neither those copies, nor any USTA-supplied aggregation of the information they contain, are used by the defendant race tracks during the racing season. Certainly, factual issues are inherent in this method of doing business
