Central Mfg Inc v. Brett, George

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 9, 2007
Docket06-2083
StatusPublished

This text of Central Mfg Inc v. Brett, George (Central Mfg Inc v. Brett, George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Mfg Inc v. Brett, George, (7th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 06-2083 CENTRAL MANUFACTURING, INCORPORATED, a Delaware corporation, doing business as Central Manufacturing Company and Central Manufacturing Company of Illinois, and STEALTH INDUSTRIES, INCORPORATED, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v.

GEORGE BRETT and BRETT BROTHERS SPORTS INTERNATIONAL, INCORPORATED, Defendants-Appellees. ____________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 04 C 3049—David H. Coar, Judge. ____________ ARGUED MAY 2, 2007—DECIDED JULY 9, 2007 ____________

Before EVANS, WILLIAMS, and SYKES, Circuit Judges. EVANS, Circuit Judge.

The Pine Tar Incident It’s undisputed: George Brett was a great baseball player. The statistics from his 21 years in The Show, all with the Kansas City Royals, seal the deal: 3,154 hits, 317 2 No. 06-2083

home runs, and a career batting average of .305. Only three other players—Stan Musial, Hank Aaron, and Willie Mays—ended their careers with more than 3,000 hits and 300 home runs, while still maintaining a lifetime batting average over .300. Brett’s selection to the Hall of Fame, on the first ballot in 1999, was richly deserved. Yet for all his accomplishments, many who love baseball will always think of the “Pine Tar Incident” as the capstone of his career. It is a joy to recall. It was July 24, 1983, and the Royals, trailing 4-3 to the New York Yankees, had a man on first but were down to their final out in the top half of the ninth inning. Brett was at the plate. The Yankees’ ace closer, “Goose” Gossage, was on the mound. And Brett crushed an 0-1 fastball over the 353-foot mark into the right field seats, giving Kansas City the lead, 5-4. Pandemonium broke out in the Royals’ dugout. The Yankee Stadium crowd fell silent. But things were about to change. While the Royals were celebrating, the Yankees’ fiery manager, Billy Martin, walked calmly (unusual for him) to home plate where he engaged the umpire, Tim McClelland, in quiet conversation. Martin pointed to an obscure rule (and we sometimes think the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure are obscure!), which provides that any sub- stance (including pine tar) that a player might rub on his bat handle for a better grip cannot extend more than 18 inches. See Major League Baseball Official Rules § 1.10(b). Martin, pointing to a lot of pine tar on the bat Brett left behind as he circled the bases, asked McClelland to check it out. McClelland, using home plate as a ruler, determined that pine tar covered 24 inches of the bat handle. So the bat, McClelland ruled, was illegal. With his ruling ready for delivery, McClelland took a few steps toward the jubilant Royals’ dugout and gave the signal: for using an illegal bat, the home run was No. 06-2083 3

nullified, and Brett was out. Game over. Yankees win 4-3. And all hell broke loose. An infuriated George Brett charged out of the dugout and rushed McClelland as Martin, who looked like the cat who ate the canary, stood off to the side. It was one of the great all-time rhubarbs in baseball history. And that’s how it ended, at least for July 24, 1983. But baseball, like our legal system, has appellate re- view. The Royals protested the game and, as luck would have it, American League President Lee MacPhail (to use a phrase with which we are accustomed) “reversed and remanded for further proceedings.” The game resumed three weeks later with Kansas City ahead, 5-4. It ended after 12 minutes when Royals’ closer Dan Quisenberry shut the door on the Yankees in their half of the ninth to seal the win. The whole colorful episode is preserved, in all its glory, on YouTube, at http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=4Cu1WXylkto (last visited June 6, 2007). See also Retrosheet Boxscore, Kansas City Royals 5, New York Yankees 4, at http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1983/ B07240NYA1983.htm (last visited June 6, 2007).

Our Case Today And so, at last, we come to this case which presents another (albeit a less compelling) appeal of a dispute involving George Brett and a baseball bat. We begin with the facts. In 2001, Brett joined Tridiamond Sports, Inc., a manu- facturer of baseballs, baseball bats, gloves, and other related accessories, to form Brett Brothers Sports Inter- national, Inc. (Brett Brothers). Tridiamond was incorpo- rated in 1997 by Joe Sample, a former airline executive who had served as vice-president and president of Inter- national Ambassador, a company specializing in the 4 No. 06-2083

organization of travel programs. International Ambassador was purchased in 1996 by former Major League Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth, and informal conversa- tions with Ueberroth soon gave Sample an idea. Ueberroth mentioned the difficulty some players had in adjusting from the use of metal baseball bats at the high school and collegiate levels to the wood bats of professional baseball. Initially introduced in the early 1970s as a cost-saving alternative for leagues operating under a smaller budget due to the breakability of wood bats, metal bats were eventually believed to generally outperform wood ones, Joseph J. Crisco et al., Batting Performance of Wood and Metal Baseball Bats, 34 Med. & Sci. in Sports & Exercise 1675, 1675 (2002), a consensus more or less confirmed by scientific studies, see, e.g., id. at 1683; Fred O. Bryant et al., Dynamic and Performance Characteristics of Baseball Bats, 48 Research Quarterly 505 (1977).1 Because the use of metal bats may inflate hitting statistics, a player’s professional prospects may be misevaluated, and the shift to wood bats may reveal a great player to be merely a very good one—the difference, potentially, between a highly compensated major league career and a decade spent on buses shuttling from Appleton to the Quad Cities. Sample realized that the uncertainty of the switch potentially created a market niche for a bat that com- bined the best of both worlds: the production and feel of the wood bat with the break-resistance of the metal bat. He thus formed Tridiamond and initiated research on the construction of a more durable wood bat. Eventually the

1 This consensus has played a role in the recent movement against the use of metal bats in youth and high school baseball, which is motivated by the concern that the use of metal bats might increase the risk of serious or even fatal injury for a player hit by a batted ball. Jim Ritter, Aluminum Bat Backlash, Chi. Sun-Times, May 10, 2007, at 6. No. 06-2083 5

company developed a specialized process of grading, lamination, and fiberglass reinforcement that enabled the product they were looking for. Tridiamond initially sold three bat models with names inspired by Sample’s back- ground in aviation: the Mirador, the Stealth, and the Bomber. Brett Brothers now sells eight different models of wood bats used throughout all levels of amateur and profes- sional baseball. Relevant for our purposes is the Stealth model, which the Brett Brothers’ Web site describes as follows: The stealth bats are constructed of laminates from hand selected and graded hardwoods. The patented “Boa” reinforcement on the handle significantly enhances durability. The choice of wood for the barrel has proven to greatly reduce the chipping and flaking characteristic in one-piece ash bats. This model has NCAA approval for all levels of play and is also BESR Certified. The Stealth bat is available in 31", 32", 33", and 34” lengths with weight drops up to -3 ounce. Brett Bros. Sports International, Inc.—The Very Best in Baseball—Bats, at http://shopsite.brettbats.com/shopbats. html (last visited June 6, 2007). The first recorded sale of the Stealth bat occurred on July 13, 1999, when twelve bats were sold to Tim Nolan of Pro-Cut in Rockford, Illinois.

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