United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
___________
No. 99-1657
___________
Gail Brookins, doing business as Ernie *
Glide Transmissions; Ernie Brookins, *
*
Plaintiffs - Appellants, *
* Appeal from the United States
v. * District Court for the
* Northern District of Iowa.
International Motor Contest Association; *
Kathy Root; Billy Joe Bushore, doing *
business as Bushore Racing Enterprises, *
*
Defendants - Appellees. *
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Submitted: January 12, 2000
Filed: August 3, 2000
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Before BOWMAN, FLOYD R. GIBSON,1 and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
___________
LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
Gail and Ernie Brookins commenced this action against the International Motor
Contest Association (“IMCA”); its president, Kathy Root; and Billy Joe Bushore, a
1
Complications from an automobile accident have prevented Judge Gibson from
reviewing this opinion prior to its being filed. The opinion is consistent with Judge
Gibson's vote at conference.
competitor of the Brookins. The dispute arose when IMCA amended its rules
governing IMCA-sanctioned “modified class” auto races in a way that, at least for a
time, barred the use in those races of two transmissions manufactured by the Brookins.
The Brookins appeal the grant of summary judgment dismissing their antitrust
conspiracy claim for failure to prove either market power in a relevant market or actual
detrimental effect on competition. We affirm.
I.
Organized in 1915, IMCA is the oldest auto racing sanctioning body in the
United States. IMCA franchises over 225 independent racing tracks in twenty-nine
States and offers a variety of advertising and merchandising programs to companies
that sponsor auto sport events. IMCA operates five racing divisions: modified, late
model, sprint car, stock car, and hobby stock car. IMCA created the modified car class
in 1979 to provide amateur auto racers an affordable but exciting racing opportunity.
The concept proved extremely popular, and in 1997 nearly 4,000 drivers participated
in IMCA-sanctioned modified races. For each racing class, IMCA promulgates
uniform nationwide rules to provide, in the words of an IMCA brochure, “consistency
and exciting competition from region to region.” Specific car rules for each racing
class are established by the IMCA executive committee.
In 1993, the Brookins introduced the “Ernie Glide” automatic transmission. It
gained increasing use in IMCA modified races, and a car using an Ernie Glide
transmission won the 1994 national championship race. Because of its novel design,
many drivers and at least two competing transmission manufacturers (including
defendant Bushore) questioned whether the Ernie Glide complied with IMCA’s rule
governing modified car transmissions. Prior to the 1995 racing season, IMCA officials
concluded that the Ernie Glide met the letter but not the intent of the existing rule.
IMCA’s executive committee then revised the rule to require that all automatic
transmissions have a functioning pump, a change that immediately affected only the
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Ernie Glide. In 1995 and 1996, the Brookins modified the Ernie Glide to include a
functioning pump and developed a new “Ernie Slide” standard transmission. After
IMCA’s Director of Competition informally assured the Brookins that their
transmissions complied with the amended modified car rule, and after the Brookins
marketed the transmissions in reliance on those assurances, IMCA’s executive
committee responded with further transmission rule changes and interpretations rather
obviously aimed at barring the use of Ernie Glide and Ernie Slide transmissions at
IMCA-sanctioned modified car races.
The Brookins commenced this action in mid-1996 when IMCA issued an
adverse last-minute pre-season interpretation of its latest transmission rule. The
Brookins alleged that defendants violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §
1, when IMCA changed its rules in response to pressure from rival transmission
manufacturers who were also IMCA sponsors. The district court2 granted a preliminary
injunction allowing drivers to continue using Ernie Slide transmissions for a reasonable
period. Following substantial discovery, the district court granted summary judgment
dismissing the Brookins’ antitrust claim, but denied summary judgment on their state
law claim of intentional interference with prospective business advantage. That tort
claim went to trial against defendant IMCA. The jury awarded the Brookins $109,000
in compensatory damages, finding that IMCA had improperly interfered with the
Brookins’ relationships with potential transmission buyers by creating and unfairly
interpreting rules with the intent of harming the Brookins’ business. IMCA does not
appeal that verdict, but the Brookins appeal the dismissal of their antitrust claim. We
review the grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the record in the light most
favorable to the Brookins. See Minnesota Ass’n of Nurse Anesthetists v. Unity Hosp.,
208 F.3d 655, 659 (8th Cir. 2000).
2
The HONORABLE MICHAEL J. MELLOY, United States District Judge for
the Northern District of Iowa.
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II.
The Brookins contend that IMCA’s adverse rule changes were the product of
concerted action by IMCA and competing transmission manufacturers that
unreasonably restrained trade in modified car transmissions.3 To prevail on this Section
1 claim, the Brookins must prove that defendants’ concerted action injured competition.
Injury to competition requires proof either of market power in a relevant market, or of
an actual adverse effect on competition. See FTC v. Indiana Fed’n of Dentists, 476
U.S. 447, 460-61 (1986). The district court concluded the Brookins failed to make the
required threshold showing of injury to competition. Noting undisputed evidence that
there are many racing classes and many competing auto racing sanctioning bodies, such
as NASCAR, CART, and USAC, the court concluded that the Brookins had failed to
offer evidence showing that IMCA has market power in the relevant racing market,
defined in defendants’ motion for summary judgment as the “oval track racing
transmission market.” The court also concluded there was no evidence that excluding
the Ernie Glide and Ernie Slide transmissions from modified car races has had an actual
adverse effect on competition in that market.
On appeal, the Brookins challenge both those conclusions. Their primary
contention is that no proof of market power is needed under the “unique” antitrust
analysis that applies when a private organization sets product standards that exclude
certain producers or deprive consumers of a desired product. Citing cases such as
3
The Brookins do not contend that defendants’ conduct amounted to a per se
unlawful group boycott, and properly so. “[P]recedent limits the per se rule in the
boycott context to cases involving horizontal agreements among direct competitors.”
NYNEX Corp. v. Discon, Inc., 525 U.S. 128, 135 (1998). The Brookins offered
evidence that two competing transmission manufacturers, defendant Bushore Racing
Enterprises and non-defendant TCI, each complained to IMCA that the Ernie Glide and
the Ernie Slide transmissions did not comply with IMCA’s modified car rules. But
there is no evidence that Bushore and TCI colluded with each other.
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Indiana Federation of Dentists and Allied Tube & Conduit Corp. v. Indian Head, Inc.,
486 U.S. 492 (1988), the Brookins argue that exclusion of the Ernie Glide and Ernie
Slide transmissions from modified car races governed by the IMCA rules had an actual
adverse effect on competition by depriving modified race car drivers of less expensive,
safer, better-performing products. Alternatively, attempting to redefine the relevant
market on appeal, the Brookins argue they presented sufficient evidence that IMCA has
market power in the market for “IMCA-approved transmissions for modified racing.”
The Brookins’ analysis is flawed because IMCA is not a typical standard-setting
organization. Its rules do not tell transmission manufacturers or drivers what types of
products or services they may sell or use in an open market. Rather, the IMCA
modified car rules help define a game or sport in which the end product is a form of
competition among race car drivers. If the game as defined is exciting for participants
and spectators, it will prosper in relation to other games with which it competes in the
broad recreational marketplace. As the Supreme Court said in describing college
football in NCAA v. Board of Regents, 468 U.S. 85, 101-02 (1984):
What the NCAA and its member institutions market in this case is
competition itself -- contests between competing institutions. Of course,
this would be completely ineffective if there were no rules on which the
competitors agreed to create and define the competition to be marketed.
A myriad of rules affecting such matters as the size of the field, the
number of players on a team, and the extent to which physical violence is
to be encouraged or proscribed, all must be agreed upon, and all restrain
the manner in which institutions compete. . . . Thus, the NCAA plays a
vital role in enabling college football to preserve its character, and as a
result enables a product to be marketed which might otherwise be
unavailable.
Without question, the way IMCA defines the rules for modified car racing will
exclude some types of equipment. But the exclusion is an incidental and inevitable by-
product of defining the game. A rule making body’s impact on equipment
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manufacturers will vary depending on the popularity of the game, and the extent to
which its rules are followed by the game’s players -- in other words, the extent to
which they are seen as the rules of the game itself, rather than the rules of that body’s
league of game-players. For example, major league baseball’s decision not to approve
the use of metal bats has probably had only a modest exclusionary impact, because
metal bats have become extraordinarily popular with millions of amateur baseball
players who are not bound by major-league rules. On the other hand, when the United
States Golf Association refuses to sanction a “revolutionary” golf ball guaranteed to fly
20% farther, the exclusionary impact is probably severe, because most amateur golfers
want to play the game under uniform nationally-sanctioned rules.
For these reasons, the few courts to consider antitrust challenges to rules defining
a sports activity have given the rule-makers considerable discretion to achieve their
sporting objectives, “[a]t least, in the absence of any demonstrated significant market
foreclosure.” M & H Tire Co. v. Hoosier Racing Tire Corp., 733 F.3d 973, 987 (1st
Cir. 1984) (upholding rule prescribing use of particular supplier’s racing tire for
modified car races); see Gunter Harz Sports, Inc. v. United States Tennis Ass’n, Inc.,
511 F. Supp. 1103 (D. Neb.), aff’d per curiam, 665 F.2d 222 (8th Cir. 1981)
(upholding ban on use of double-strung tennis rackets). The Brookins argue they need
not undertake this market analysis because they presented proof of an actual adverse
effect on competition -- precluding race car drivers from using a cheaper, safer, easier-
to-maintain transmission. But unless the rule-maker’s decision was tainted by supplier
coercion, an issue we will address in a moment, the exclusion was the incidental result
of defining the rules of a particular game, IMCA modified car racing. IMCA did not
attempt to tell race car drivers not to use the Ernie Glide or the Ernie Slide in other
types of racing. And if modified car drivers become convinced that the Brookins’
transmissions are cheaper, safer, and easier to maintain, IMCA will need to reinterpret
or change its modified car rules to allow use of the Ernie Glide and the Ernie Slide, or
the drivers will gravitate to the races of other modified car sanctioning bodies, or to
other classes of racing. In these circumstances, IMCA rules are not the kind of “naked
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restraint” on competition that justify foregoing the market analysis normally required
in Section 1 rule-of-reason cases. See generally California Dental Ass’n v. FTC, 526
U.S. 756 (1999).
Absent proof of an actual adverse effect on competition, the district court
properly required the Brookins to define the relevant market and offer proof that IMCA
has market power in that market. In the district court, the Brookins accepted the broad
relevant product market defined by defendants -- transmissions for all oval track racing
-- but offered no evidence as to what share of that market consists of modified car races
governed by the IMCA modified car rules. On appeal, the Brookins urge a narrower
product market -- transmissions used in modified car racing sanctioned by IMCA. In
other words, the Brookins now argue that IMCA-sanctioned modified car racing is, by
itself, a relevant market. But that assertion requires proof there is no cross-elasticity
of demand between this game and other games that modified car racers might choose
to play. See, e.g., Brown Shoe Co. v. United States, 370 U.S. 294, 325 (1962). Given
the evidence of many other classes of auto racing, and many other auto racing
sanctioning bodies, on this record no reasonable jury could find that races governed by
the IMCA modified car rules are a separate relevant market for antitrust purposes.
Finally, we turn to a distinct antitrust issue, the Brookins’ allegations that IMCA
colluded with rival transmission manufacturers, Bushore and TCI. So long as IMCA
made game-defining rules decisions based upon its purposes as a sports organization,
an antitrust court need not be concerned with the rationality or fairness of those
decisions. Irrational decisions and unfair treatment of suppliers will result in an
unpopular game, and players and spectators will take their entertainment dollars
elsewhere. But if the rules decisions are corrupted by coercion from competitors of the
disadvantaged supplier, we have a different antitrust setting, one very similar to
American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Inc. v. Hydrolevel Corp., 456 U.S. 556
(1982), in which the Supreme Court upheld a jury verdict for a competitor injured by
a product standard tainted in this fashion.
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In this case, the purpose of the IMCA’s modified car rules was summarized by
the organization’s President, Kathy Root, in her deposition testimony:
Racing has a history of developing a class of race cars; technology takes
over; the cars become obsolete because there’s only a selected few people
that can afford to have that car anymore.
When Keith [her predecessor] started the IMCA Modified
Division, his goal was to keep it as close to the 1979 rules as possible and
to keep technology out of racing. Okay? So if a new, supposedly, quote,
better part came along . . . the biggest concern is something to come along
to make the other parts obsolete, forcing 4,000 race drivers to throw away
the equipment that they had and buy more. And that has been our
constant concern is to keep the technology out of racing. That’s why we
are concerned with people who try to circumvent the rules and introduce
this new technology.
The Brookins simply failed to present probative evidence that Bushore or TCI coerced
the IMCA rulings in question, or that IMCA’s decisions were made for reasons other
than those explained by Ms. Root. To be sure, Bushore and TCI -- as well as many
drivers -- raised with IMCA the question whether the novel Ernie Glide and Ernie Slide
transmissions were consistent with IMCA’s modified car rules. But it is to be expected
that contestants and competing suppliers will complain, or at least question, whether
a new technology complies with “the rules of the game.” This type of complaint is not
proof that IMCA’s rulings were the product of collusive rather than independent action.
See Monsanto Co. v. Spray-Rite Serv. Corp., 465 U.S. 752, 762-64 (1984). It is also
unsurprising that IMCA, when faced with a new transmission technology, consulted
other transmission manufacturers, as well as the Brookins, in investigating the rule
compliance issue. There is no evidence that IMCA had a financial incentive to accede
to the wishes of the Brookins’ transmission competitors -- sponsors of IMCA-
sanctioned events pay only modest fees to IMCA and spend most of their money on
advertising and driver prizes. There is no evidence that IMCA’s rulings were made for
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reasons other than its overall purpose to define a set of rules for a popular game. Thus,
the Brookins failed to present sufficient evidence of concerted action in restraint of
trade. See Corner Pocket of Sioux Falls, Inc. v. Video Lottery Techs., Inc., 123 F.3d
1107, 111-12 (8th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1117 (1998).
On this record, the district court’s summary judgment rulings correctly perceived
the difference between conduct that injures competition generally, which is the concern
of the antitrust laws, and conduct that may violate other state laws which “provide
remedies for various competitive practices thought to be offensive to proper standards
of business morality.” NYNEX, 525 U.S. at 137 (quotation omitted). The Brookins
failed to present evidence of injury to competition, and their antitrust claim was
therefore dismissed. The jury found and remedied a violation of state law arising out
of the unfair manner in which IMCA amended and implemented its modified car
transmission rule. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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