Eleven Line, Inc. v. North Texas State Soccer Ass'n

213 F.3d 198, 2000 WL 684547
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 29, 2000
Docket98-11102
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 213 F.3d 198 (Eleven Line, Inc. v. North Texas State Soccer Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eleven Line, Inc. v. North Texas State Soccer Ass'n, 213 F.3d 198, 2000 WL 684547 (5th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:

This case concerns allegedly exclusionary, anti-competitive conduct by non-profit volunteer-run soccer organizations against a for-profit indoor soccer facility that operated in the Midland-Odessa community of West Texas. A jury found that the organizations’ implementation of a membership rule requiring players, coaches and referees to play soccer only at “sanctioned” facilities essentially put the plaintiff, Eleven Line, Inc., out of business. Several federal antitrust and state law causes of action were sustained by the jury, and judgment was rendered for $100,000 in lost profits before trebling. The court enjoined enforcement of the unsanctioned play rule.

On appeal, North Texas State Soccer Association (“NTSSA”) seeks a defense in the Amateur Sports Act, a law passed by Congress to enhance this country’s competitiveness in the Olympics by eliminating organizational factionalism in amateur sports. See H.R. Rep. 95-1627, 95th Cong., 2d Sess.1978, 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7478 (hereinafter “H.R. Rep.”). Failing that, NTSSA questions every significant aspect of the verdict on the Sherman Act § 1 and § 2 claims and the Texas tortious interference claims. NTSSA also challenges the sufficiency of Eleven Line’s proof of damages. Although a number of issues raised by NTSSA cast doubt on the judgment, we ultimately conclude that Eleven Line failed to show that it suffered compensable damages resulting from NTSSA’s conduct.

*200 I. BACKGROUND

Tom Higginson, San Diego-based president of Eleven Line, Inc., parlayed his lifelong love of soccer into several ventures, including a string of indoor soccer arenas in various parts of the country. In 1990, Higginson opened The Permian Basin Sports Center (“PBSC”), an indoor arena in Midland, in a building formerly occupied by an 84 Lumber discount home improvement warehouse. 1 Higginson bought the building and its parking lot after a four or five-day visit to Midland-Odessa. He became persuaded, by attending one semi-pro soccer game, visiting a small indoor arena already in business there, and talking with local soccer enthusiasts, that the Midland-Odessa area would welcome a bigger and better indoor soccer arena. 2

PBSC’s operation was modeled on Hig-ginson’s other indoor arenas. Most of his youth customers were outdoor soccer players, ranging from youth six years old to nineteen, who wanted to maintain their skills during the winter and summer off-seasons for outdoor soccer. The adult leagues ran year-round. PBSC ran leagues of a minimum of four teams, grouped according to age or skill level. Each team consisted of about 10 players, fewer than an outdoor soccer team because the arenas are smaller. PBSC furnished player ID cards, maintained league standings, ran competitions, disciplined players, and coordinated with other Higginson-run facilities on interstate tournaments. While PBSC did not formally train referees, it required them to pass a written qualifying test. For officiating services, the facility drew from its managers and from the more numerous pool of referees trained by the NTSSA-affiliated organizations. The arena similarly depended on coaches from the outdoor teams to organize teams of youth interested in continuing playing during the off-seasons. 3 But PBSC would also form teams of players who signed up singly at its facility.

The arena charged $350 per team for each eight-game session. The teams paid small separate fees to the scorekeeper and one referee at each game. PBSC earned additional revenues from snack and drink sales and private rentals of the facility. Players were not insured at PBSC, which required a waiver of liability from each of its customers.

Higginson chose not to join NTSSA as a “sanctioned” facility because he disagreed with some of the organization’s rules and felt that NTSSA would raise his costs and interfere with his management prerogatives. 4

The arena’s business lurched along for five years, but its annual gross revenue peaked at $108,000 in 1991. Higginson or his investors transfused capital into the business nearly every year. Nevertheless, the company periodically fell behind in its payroll and property taxes. In 1995, because of insufficient revenue and a manager “who was not very good at depositing [revenue] in our account,” Higginson closed the arena from June through October. Events surrounding the ill-fated reopening of the facility in November 1995 are the basis for this lawsuit.

*201 PBSC’s business potential was directly attributable to the growing popularity of organized soccer in Midland-Odessa. Making inroads into a locality saturated by the American football ethos, the Midland (“MSA”) and Odessa (“OSA”) soccer associations’ enrollment grew from about 2,700 in 1990 to over 4,500 registered players at the date of trial in early 1998. 5 The success of outdoor soccer resulted from thousands of hours’ effort by unpaid volunteers, many of whom began as soccer moms and dads seeking a sports activity for their children. The volunteers ran the MSA and OSA literally from the ground up, building soccer fields in the hard west Texas caleche soil, coordinating the league, training players, coaches and referees, fund raising, and disciplining players. Neither organization had more than one full-time paid employee during the period covered by the lawsuit. MSA and OSA ran the only significant youth soccer programs in their respective communities.

MSA and OSA are members of the North Texas State Soccer Association, also a volunteer-run, non-profit corporation, which is a “national state association” member of the United States Soccer Federation (“USSF”). USSF, the national governing body for the sport of soccer, oversees United States participation in the Olympic games pursuant to the Amateur Sports Act of 1978. Its work is carried out by 55 national state associations (Texas, like a couple of other large states, being subdivided into two such organizations). NTSSA is the fifth largest national state association, and it has the largest adult registration among the USSF’s members. The USSF prescribes rules of soccer, determines qualifications for coaches and referees, and oversees the operations of the national state associations. It has the obligation to approve the local rules of national state associations and may enact eligibility standards for players. The overriding purpose of these organizations is to encourage the game of soccer, promoting its popularity as a recreational and competitive sport and enhancing the skills, safety and sportsmanship of the participants.

Notwithstanding the lofty goals of the volunteer soccer organizations, PBSC alleged that their attempted hegemony over the sport fatally wounded its business.

NTSSA passed an eligibility rule in the 1980’s, which stated that:

3.2 Youth and amateur players or teams who participate with unregistered players or engage in unsanctioned play shall void their NTSSA registration and must apply for reinstatement to their appropriate Youth or' Amateur Commissioner, along with a refiling fee of $2 per player.
3.2.1.

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Bluebook (online)
213 F.3d 198, 2000 WL 684547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eleven-line-inc-v-north-texas-state-soccer-assn-ca5-2000.