Sullivan v. Tagliabue

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-2153

                       CHARLES W. SULLIVAN,

                      Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                v.

                     PAUL TAGLIABUE, ET AL.,

                      Defendants, Appellees.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. Edward F. Harrington, U.S. District Judge]
                                                        

                                           

                              Before

                       Breyer,* Chief Judge,
                                           
                  Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                              
                  and Torruella, Circuit Judge.
                                              

                                           

  Joseph L. Alioto with whom Angela  M. Alioto, Frederick P.  Furth,
                                                                   
Bruce J.  Wecker, Michael P. Lehmann and Alan R. Hoffman were on brief
                                                      
for appellant.
  John  Vanderstar  with whom  Sonya  D.  Winner,  Ethan M.  Posner,
                                                                   
Jeremiah T. O'Sullivan, Sarah Chapin  Columbia, Joseph W. Cotchett and
                                                                
Susan Illston were on brief for appellees.
           

                                           

                           June 6, 1994
                                           

                  

*Chief Judge Stephen Breyer heard oral argument in this matter but did
not  participate  in  the drafting  or  the  issuance  of the  panel's
opinion.   The remaining  two panelists  therefore issue  this opinion
pursuant to 28 U.S.C.   46(d).

     COFFIN, Senior  Circuit Judge.   Plaintiff  Charles Sullivan
                                  

brought this action individually and as assignee of the assets of

Stadium Management Corporation  (SMC) challenging, as an  illegal

restraint  in  trade,  a  National  Football  League  (NFL)  Rule

prohibiting the sale of shares in an NFL franchise to any company

not  engaged  in  the   business  of  professional  football,  in

violation of  Sections 1  and  2 of  the Sherman  Act.1   See  15
                                                             

U.S.C.     1, 2.  The  district court held that  plaintiff lacked

standing to  bring this  claim and  granted summary  judgment for

defendants.2  After a review of the record, we affirm.

                    

1Sullivan also alleged supplemental state law claims of breach of
fiduciary obligations, interference with prospective advantageous
contract,  unfair trade practices,  and intentional infliction of
emotional  distress.   When  the district  court granted  summary
judgment on the federal antitrust claims, it declined to exercise
supplemental  jurisdiction  over  the  state  law  claims.    See
                                                                 
Sullivan v. Tagliabue, 828 F. Supp. 114, 120 n.6 (D. Mass. 1993).
                     

2Defendants  named  in  this  action are  the  NFL,  current  NFL
Commissioner  Paul Tagliabue  and his  predecessor Pete  Rozelle.
Paragraph  7  of  the  complaint  also  names  the  following  21
organizations  owning  NFL  franchises: The  Five  Smiths,  Inc.:
Indianapolis  Colts,  Inc.; Buffalo  Bills,  Inc.; Chicago  Bears
Football Club, Inc.; Cincinnati Bengals,  Inc.; Cleveland Browns,
Inc.;  Dallas Cowboys Football Club, Ltd.;  PDB Sports, Ltd.; The
Detroit  Lions, Inc.;  Green Bay  Packers, Inc.;  Houston Oilers,
Inc.; Los  Angeles Rams Football Co.;  Minnesota Vikings Football
Club, Inc.; New Orleans  Saints LP; New York Jets  Football Club,
Inc.;  B & B Holdings, Inc.; Pittsburgh Steelers, Inc.; Tampa Bay
Area  NFL Football,  Inc.; Pro-Football, Inc.;  Chargers Football
Co.; and Seattle Professional Football Club, Inc.
     The  caption  of  plaintiff's  complaint  names  a  slightly
different set of defendants.  It fails to  include either the Los
Angeles  Rams  Football  Co.  or  the  Charges  Football  Co.  as
defendants,  and adds the New  York Football Giants,  Inc. to the
list.

                               -2-

                     I.  Factual Background.
                                           

     Charles  Sullivan   (plaintiff  or Sullivan)  is the  former

owner  and sole stockholder of SMC, which owned the stadium where

the New England Patriots  play their games.  His  father, William

Sullivan, was the Patriots' owner at all relevant times.

     In 1987, William Sullivan  sought to sell a 49%  interest in

the Patriots to an investment banking firm not in the business of

football, which, in  turn, was to sell the shares  to the public.

Through  this transaction,  plaintiff, through  SMC, expected  to

obtain financing for his stadium.  

     Under the terms of the  NFL Constitution and By-Laws, member

teams  are  not permitted  to sell  shares  to the  public unless

three-fourths  of  the members  approve.    William Sullivan  was

unable to persuade  the other  NFL owners to  allow his  proposed

deal, and in October 1988, he  instead sold the team to a private

buyer.   In February  1988, SMC  filed a  Chapter 11  petition in

bankruptcy,  and  the  stadium  subsequently  was  sold  for  the

"bargain basement price" of $25 million. 

     In May 1991,  William Sullivan sued  the NFL, alleging  that

its  policy  against   public  ownership  violated   the  federal

antitrust  laws  because  it  unreasonably  restrained  trade  in

ownership  interests in NFL teams.3   Charles Sullivan filed this

lawsuit  several months later  against the NFL  and other parties

                    

3On  October  22,  1993,  a  jury awarded  William  Sullivan  $38
million, which was reduced  by the district court upon  motion by
the  defendants  to  $17  million,  before  trebling.    The  NFL
defendants have appealed this verdict.  

                               -3-

allegedly  responsible for  enforcing  the challenged  rule.   He

claims  that, had  the public  offering of  Patriots' stock  been

permitted, SMC would have received a $40 million dollar loan from

the  investment banking firm that would have been used to pay off

debts and to  make significant  renovations to the  stadium.   In

addition, in 1987,  the stadium  held a lease  with the  Patriots

which extended until 2002, which Sullivan alleges would have been

extended for  20 years had  the sale  of the Patriots  stock gone

through.    Finally, he  claims,  the  NFL policy  prevented  the

Patriots from  making their own investment in  the maintenance of

the stadium, thus undermining SMC's  ability to keep the Patriots

from  breaking  their  lease  with  SMC  and  moving  to  another

location.4   

     As  damages, plaintiff  claims  the amount  of the  enhanced

market value of  the stadium  that would have  resulted from  the

planned renovations and the lease extension.

                    

4During   the  bankruptcy  proceedings,   plaintiff  received  an
assignment  of all SMC's causes of action in consideration of the
release of claims against SMC by plaintiff.  
     The  NFL  argues  that   Sullivan,  as  SMC's  assignee,  is
precluded  from pursuing  its  antitrust claims  against the  NFL
defendants  because SMC did not disclose  these claims during the
course  of the  bankruptcy proceedings.    They contend  that, at
least by October, 1990,  when he entered into a  stipulation with
the  bankruptcy  trustee resolving  claims  by  and against  him,
Sullivan  was fully  aware of  all  of the  facts upon  which his
complaint is based and that his antitrust claims should have been
raised  in the  bankruptcy proceedings.   In  their view,  SMC is
therefore estopped  from bringing a  legal action to  enforce the
claims against the NFL defendants.
     For  the  purposes  of  this decision,  we  assume,  without
deciding, that SMC is  not estopped from bringing a  legal action
to enforce these claims. 

                               -4-

     The district court granted  summary judgment for defendants,

holding  that  Sullivan lacked  antitrust  standing.   The  court

reached  this  conclusion  by  determining   that  the  materials

submitted indisputably showed that the injury  plaintiff suffered

was  not within the type contemplated by the antitrust laws; that

its  impact was too indirect;  and that the  damages claimed were

too speculative.  Plaintiff now appeals.  

     Our  review  of a  grant  of  summary  judgment is  plenary.

Mendes v. Medtronic, Inc., 18 F.3d 13, 15 (1st Cir. 1994). 
                         

          II.  General Principles of Antitrust Standing
                                                       

     Sullivan asserts that under Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15

U.S.C.   15(a) (1994),  he has standing both individually  and on

behalf of SMC  to maintain  a private damage  action against  the

NFL.   Under Section 4, "[A]ny person who shall be injured in his

business  or property  by  reason of  anything  forbidden in  the

antitrust  laws may  sue therefor  in any  district court  of the

United States in the  district in which the defendant  resides or

is found . . . without  respect to the amount in controversy, and

shall  recover threefold  the damages by  him sustained,  and the

cost of the suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee."5  

     This statutory  language is  broad, conferring the  right to

sue on "any  person" claiming  an injury causally  related to  an

                    

5It is  unquestioned that the requirements  of antitrust standing
exceed  those  of  standing  in  a  constitutional  sense.    See
                                                                 
Associated General Contractors, Inc. v. California  State Council
                                                                 
of Carpenters, 459  U.S. 519,  535 n.31 (1977);  see also  Daniel
                                                         
Berger &  Roger Bernstein, An Analytical  Framework for Antitrust
                                                                 
Standing, 86 Yale L.J. 809, 813 n.11 (1977).
        

                               -5-

antitrust injury.   However,  the  class of  persons entitled  to

recover  damages under  Section  4 has  been  limited by  caselaw

through  the doctrine  of "antitrust  standing."   See Associated
                                                                 

General  Contractors  of  California,  Inc.  v. California  State
                                                                 

Council of Carpenters, 459 U.S.  519, 529-35 (1983); Blue  Shield
                                                                 

of Virginia v. McCready, 457 U.S. 465, 472-73 (1982).
                       

     In  Associated  General   Contractors,  the  Supreme   Court
                                          

outlined  a  series of factors to be evaluated  on a case-by-case

basis to determine whether  a plaintiff has standing to  bring an

antitrust action.6  These factors are: (1) the causal  connection

between  the   alleged  antitrust  violation  and   harm  to  the

plaintiff;  (2)  an  improper  motive;  (3)  the  nature  of  the

plaintiff's alleged injury and  whether the injury was of  a type

that  Congress   sought  to  redress  with   the  antitrust  laws

("antitrust injury");  (4) the directness with  which the alleged

market restraint caused the  asserted injury; (5) the speculative

                    

6Prior  to  Associated  General Contractors,  circuit  courts had
                                           
crafted a variety of  tests to determine whether a  party injured
by an antitrust  violation had  standing to bring  an action  for
treble damages under Section 4 of the Clayton Act.   The two most
commonly stated tests focused  on the "directness of the  injury"
to the alleged  antitrust violation, and whether  a plaintiff was
in the "target area" of the antitrust conspiracy.  See Associated
                                                                 
General  Contractors,  459  U.S.  at  535-36  &  n.33  (citations
                    
omitted); Phillip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law,  
                                                              
334.1 (1993 Supp.).   A third test considered whether  the injury
was  "`arguably within  the zone  of interests  protected by  the
antitrust laws.'"   Associated  General Contractors, 459  U.S. at
                                                   
536 n.33 (citation omitted).   In Associated General Contractors,
                                                                
the Court, noting that it was "virtually impossible to announce a
black-letter rule  that will dictate  the result in  every case,"
459  U.S. at  536, drew  on these  tests to  outline a  series of
factors  to guide courts in deciding  whether a private plaintiff
should   have  standing  to  pursue  an  antitrust  action  in  a
particular case.  See id. at 536-46.
                         

                               -6-

nature of the damages;  and (6) the risk of  duplicative recovery

or complex apportionment  of damages.   459 U.S.  at 537-45;  See
                                                                 

also Lovett v. General Motors Corp., 975 F.2d  518, 520 (8th Cir.
                                   

1992) (listing factors).

     Though   Associated   General    Contractors   outlined    a
                                                 

comprehensive approach to the  question of antitrust standing, it

gives little guidance as to how to weigh the various factors, and

whether  the absence  of a  particular factor  would be  fatal to

standing in  every instance.   In Associated  General Contractors
                                                                 

itself, the  Court found that two factors,  the causal connection

between the  Union's alleged  injuries and  the violation  of the

antitrust laws, and the  allegation of improper motive, supported

a grant of standing, 459 U.S. at 537, but that a consideration of

the remaining  relevant factors weighed heavily against standing,

id.  at 545.  The  Court concluded that,  in the circumstances of
   

that  case, these  latter  factors were  controlling, and  denied

standing to the plaintiffs.  Id. at 545-46.
                                

     We draw  from the  Court's discussion in  Associated General
                                                                 

Contractors the  requirement that courts consider  the balance of
           

factors  in each case in an effort to guard against "engraft[ing]

artificial limitations on the   4 remedy."  McCready, 457 U.S. at
                                                    

472.  See  also Los Angeles Memorial  Coliseum v. NFL, 791  F.2d,
                                                     

1356,  1363 (9th Cir. 1986)  ("Most cases will  find some factors

tending in favor of standing . . . , and some against . . . , and

a   court  may  find  standing  if  the  balance  of  factors  so

instructs."); accord Southaven  Land Co. v. Malone &  Hyde, Inc.,
                                                                

                               -7-

715 F.2d  1079, 1085-86  (6th  Cir. 1983);  Ashmore v.  Northeast
                                                                 

Petroleum Corp. of Cape Cod, 843 F. Supp. 759, 765 (D. Me. 1994).
                           

       III.  Application to Claims Brought on Behalf of SMC
                                                           

A.  Factors Supporting Standing
                               

     Sullivan argues  that the  district court was  correct when,

evaluating the relevant factors as they applied to claims brought

on  behalf of  SMC,  it found  that  plaintiff had  alleged,  and

presented evidence  of, a  causal connection between  the alleged

antitrust  violation  and  the  harm to  the  plaintiff,  and  an

improper motive on the part of  defendants; and when it found  no

significant  risk of  duplicate recoveries  or danger  of complex

apportionment  in this  case.   He  maintains, however,  that the

court  erred  in  its  determination  that  the  absence  of  the

remaining Associated  General  Contractors factors  required  the
                                          

court  to deny standing.   He contends that  he has satisfied the

remaining factors, and  that the  court should  have granted  him

standing  to press his  antitrust suit, both  individually and on

behalf of SMC.

     We  agree  that  the  district court  correctly  found  that

Sullivan's  complaint  met   three  of  the   Associated  General
                                                                 

Contractors factors.  Sullivan  alleged, and presented  evidence,
           

of  a causal connection between  the application of  the NFL Rule

and  SMC's inability to refinance the stadium because the sale of

Patriots' stock  to the  public was  prohibited.   Sullivan  also

alleged an improper motive on the part of defendants in that they

"sought  to  restrain  and  monopolize  interstate  commerce   in

                               -8-

professional  football"   and  took  the  actions   they  did  in

furtherance of that  goal.  In addition,  Sullivan indicated that

defendants intended  to block the  refinancing of the  stadium by

their  actions, or,  at the very  least, that  such a  harm was a

foreseeable  consequence of the  application of  the Rule  to the

Patriots.7   Nor does there  appear to be  a significant  risk of

duplicate  recovery or  danger of  complex apportionment  in this

case,   as  the   injuries  of   which  Sullivan   complains  are

sufficiently distinct from those alleged by William Sullivan, the

only other plausible litigant in this case.8

B.  Factors Defeating Standing
                              

     We are  not persuaded, however, by  Sullivan's argument that

he   satisfies  the  remaining  Associated  General  Contractors'
                                                                 

factors.  The existence  of antitrust injury is a  central factor

in the standing calculus.9   In this case, its  absence, together

                    

7Of course, as  the Supreme Court has  noted, the presence of  an
improper motive on the part of the defendants is  not, by itself,
determinative  of  antitrust  standing.   See  Associated General
                                                                 
Contractors,  519  U.S.  at  537   &  n.37  (noting  that  "[t]he
           
availability of  the    4 remedy  to some  person who claims  its
benefit  is  not  a  question  of  the  specific  intent  of  the
conspirators") (quoting McCready, 457 U.S. at 479).
                                

8We  recognize that  there is  a risk  of duplicate  recovery and
complex  apportionment of  damages  as between  Sullivan, in  his
individual  capacity,  and  SMC,  in  light  of  their  seemingly
overlapping  injuries.   We  think  that  this  can  be  avoided,
however,  given  that plaintiff  brings  this  single action  for
damages suffered by both.

9Some  courts have  concluded that  a consideration  of antitrust
injury is of  threshold significance  in the  Section 4  standing
inquiry.  See,  e.g., Balaklaw v.  Lovell, 14 F.3d 793,  797-98 &
                                         
n.9 (2d Cir. 1994); Todorov v. DCH Healthcare Authority, 921 F.2d
                                                       
1438, 1449 (11th  Cir. 1991); see also  State of South  Dakota v.
                                                              

                               -9-

with  the  indirectness  of  the  injury  to  Sullivan,  and  the

speculative  nature   of  the  claimed  damages,   outweighs  the

remaining factors.   We  therefore conclude that  plaintiff lacks

standing to pursue the claims brought on behalf of SMC.

1.  The Nature of the Injury: Is it Antitrust Injury?
                                                     

     Sullivan contends that  he has suffered  "antitrust injury,"

that is, the type of injury that the antitrust laws were designed

to prevent.  He relies principally  on McCready, 457 U.S. at 465,
                                               

and  Los  Angeles Coliseum,  791 F.2d  at  1356, to  support this
                          

claim.

     The   Supreme  Court  first   articulated  the   concept  of

"antitrust injury"  in Brunswick Corp. v.  Pueblo Bowl-O-Mat, 429
                                                            

U.S. 477  (1977).   In Brunswick,  several small bowling  centers
                                

brought  suit, challenging  the acquisition  of several  of their

competitors  by  the  much  larger Brunswick  Corporation  as  an

anticompetitive merger under  Section 7  of the  Clayton Act,  15

U.S.C.     18, and  seeking treble  damages  under Section  4 for

                    

Kansas  City Southern Industries, 880 F.2d 40, 46 (8th Cir. 1989)
                                
(noting primacy  of antitrust injury requirement).   Cf. Cargill,
                                                                 
Inc. v. Montfort of Colorado, Inc., 479 U.S. 104, 110, n.5 (1986)
                                  
(pointing  out, in  the  course of  considering antitrust  injury
requirement for  private plaintiffs  seeking an  injunction under
Section 16 of the Clayton Act, that a showing of antitrust injury
was  a  necessary  (though  not  always  sufficient)  element  of
standing to sue for damages under Section 4).  
    We agree  that the absence of antitrust injury weighs heavily
against  a grant  of standing.   We  need not  consider, however,
whether  this  should be  fatal  to standing  in  every instance,
because in the circumstances  of this case, we conclude  that the
balance of factors as a whole weighs against a grant of standing.

                               -10-

profits they would have made had the acquired centers gone out of

business.  Id. at 480-81.  
              

     Although plaintiffs had  alleged that Brunswick had  engaged

in  predatory practices  designed  to lessen  competition in  the

markets  it had entered,  they could prove  only that Brunswick's

acquisitions had  deprived them of  profits they would  have made

had the acquired firms closed.  Id. at 488, 490 & nn.15, 16.  The
                                   

Court  noted that,  in essence,  plaintiffs were  not complaining

that Brunswick's  actions had reduced competition,  but preserved

it,  thereby depriving  plaintiffs of  the benefits  of increased

concentration.   Id. at 488.  Rejecting the lower court's holding
                    

that  any loss  "causally linked"  to "the  mere presence  of the

violator in the market" was compensable, id. at 486-87, the Court
                                            

found  that  plaintiffs'  injury  was  not  of   "`the  type  the

[antitrust laws] were intended to forestall,'" 429 U.S. at 487-88

(citation  omitted).    The Court  held  that  to recover  treble

damages  under  Section  4,  a plaintiff  must  prove  "antitrust
                                                                 

injury,  which is  to say injury  of the type  the antitrust laws

were intended to  prevent and  that flows from  that which  makes

defendants' acts unlawful."  Id. at 489 (emphasis in original).
                                

     In Blue Shield of Virginia v. McCready, 457 U.S. 465 (1982),
                                           

the  first case  explicitly  to address  antitrust standing,  the

Court incorporated a focus on "antitrust injury" into its Section

4 standing inquiry.   The plaintiff in McCready was  a subscriber
                                               

of  Blue Shield,  a health  insurance plan  that did  not provide

reimbursement   for   psychotherapy    treatment   rendered    by

                               -11-

psychologists  (unless  "prescribed"  by  and  billed  through  a

medical  doctor),  while  providing reimbursement  for  the  same

treatment if given by a psychiatrist.  McCready  was treated by a

psychologist,  and Blue Shield refused  to reimburse her for this

treatment.  McCready brought suit, alleging that  Blue Shield and

an  association  of  psychiatrists  had engaged  in  an  unlawful

conspiracy "`to exclude and  boycott clinical psychologists  from

receiving compensation  under'" the  Blue Shield plans,  and that

Blue Shield's  failure to  reimburse was  in furtherance  of this

conspiracy.  McCready, 457 U.S. at 470.
                     

     The  defendants  argued  that  McCready  had   not  suffered

"antitrust  injury" because her injury did  not reflect the anti-

competitive effect of  the alleged antitrust  violation.  Id.  at
                                                             

481-82.  McCready had not paid inflated fees for psychotherapy to

psychiatrists, the supposed beneficiaries  of the conspiracy; nor

had she alleged  that her psychologists'  bills were higher  than

they would have been had the conspiracy not existed.  Id. at 481.
                                                         

     The Court, however, refused to so limit recovery.  While not

a competitor of the conspirators, the injury McCready suffered --

sanction in the form  of the unreimbursed psychologists' services

-- "was inextricably intertwined with the injury the conspirators

sought  to inflict"  on the  market.   Id.  at 483-84.   McCready
                                          

suffered injury by virtue of the role she played in Blue Shield's

anticompetitive scheme.    Denying reimbursement  to patients  of

psychologists was the  "very means" by which Blue  Shield coerced

                               -12-

her to choose  between becoming an  unwilling participant in  its

illegal campaign to boycott the  services of psychologists, or to

pay the costs of treatment  for the therapist of her choice  from

her own pocket.  The harm to McCready was thus  a "necessary step

in effecting the ends of the alleged illegal conspiracy."  Id. at
                                                              

479.  The Court therefore found that McCready's injury "`flow[ed]

from  that which  makes  defendants' acts  unlawful,' within  the

meaning  of  Brunswick," falling  "squarely  within  the area  of
                      

congressional concern."  Id. at 484.
                            

     Sullivan  argues that  the  logic of  McCready supports  his
                                                   

standing.  In  Sullivan's view,  the NFL rule  at issue  affected

competition  in the market for football  stadia by preventing SMC

from obtaining refinancing to pay for renovations that would have

led the Patriots to  extend their lease, and by  interfering with

the Patriots'  capacity to  invest money  in  the maintenance  of

their  stadium,  thus  undermining  SMC's  ability  to  keep  the

Patriots from breaking their lease with SMC and moving to another

location.     Further,  the  injury  to   SMC  was  "inextricably

intertwined"  with that to the owner of the New England Patriots,

since SMC expected to benefit from a joint proposal to  conduct a

public offering of a minority ownership  in the team; and was  an

"integral  aspect" of  the conspiracy  against the  owner  of the

Patriots and was likely to result from the implementation of that

conspiracy.

     Like McCready,  Sullivan claims,  neither the fact  that SMC

stood  in a vertical relationship  to the intended  victim of the

                               -13-

alleged antitrust  violation (purchasers of NFL  franchises), nor

the fact that SMC's injuries might be characterized as "indirect"

deprive SMC of standing.  Likewise, Sullivan's failure to show an

increase  in price or a lessening of supply in the stadia market,

and the fact that Sullivan's personal losses  might be derivative

of  those suffered by SMC  are not dispositive.   Sullivan points

out  that McCready's losses, for  example, were at  least in part

derivative of those suffered  by her employer, who as  the direct

purchaser  of  the  group  health  insurance  from  Blue  Shield,

presumably  did  not get  the benefit  of  its bargain  with Blue

Shield.

      We disagree that McCready favors Sullivan's right to sue.  
                               

Sullivan is correct  that McCready  did stand, in  part, for  the
                                  

Court's refusal to limit recovery to those  whose injuries result

from the  anti-competitive effect of the violation, and to extend

available recovery at least to some parties who stand in vertical

relationship (such  as  customers) to  the  direct victim  of  an

antitrust  violation.10    Thus, the  fact  that  SMC  was not  a

competitor  in the  market for  professional football  teams, the

direct  victim of  the alleged  antitrust violation,  but in  the

related  market for football stadia, does not by itself mean that

                    

10In  this respect,  we disagree  with defendants'  argument that
SMC, merely by virtue of its status as the Patriots' landlord, is
necessarily barred  from bringing suit for injury  to its tenant.
Whether  a landlord has standing to sue  for injury to its tenant
depends,  in part,  on the  relationship of  the landlord  to the
relevant market and to  the antitrust violation.  For  example, a
landlord may have standing to sue for injuries to a  tenant based
on  its status  as a  competitor in an  adjacent market,  see Los
                                                                 
Angeles Coliseum, 791 F.2d at 1363-65.
                

                               -14-

he lacks standing here.  See McCready at 472 (refusing to engraft
                                     

artificial constraints  on Section 4, stating  that "`the statute

does  not confine its protection to  consumers, or to purchasers,

or to competitors, or  to sellers'") (internal citation omitted).

     The  circuits  are  split,  however, over  the  question  of

whether  a plaintiff must be  either a consumer  or competitor in

the market harmed by the antitrust violation at issue in order to

establish  antitrust  injury.    Some courts  have  held  that  a

plaintiff may establish antitrust  injury by proof that he  was a

consumer or competitor in the relevant market, or by showing that
                                                 

his  injury was  "inextricably  intertwined" with  the injury  to

competition, in that the  plaintiff was "`manipulated or utilized

by  [d]efendant as a fulcrum,  conduit or market  force to injure

competitors  or   participants  in   the  relevant   product  and

geographic market.'"  Province  v. Cleveland Press Pub.  Co., 787
                                                            

F.2d 1047, 1052 (6th  Cir. 1986) (quoting Southaven, 715  F.2d at
                                                   

1086); see  Ostrofe v. H.S. Crocker Co., Inc., 740 F.2d 739, 745-
                                             

46 (9th Cir. 1984)  (though neither a consumer nor  competitor in

the  relevant  market,  fact  that  injury  to  plaintiff  was  a

necessary  means  to  achieve   the  conspirators'  illegal   end

sufficient to  establish antitrust injury); Ashmore  v. Northeast
                                                                 

Petroleum Division of Cargill, 843  F. Supp. 759, 769-70  (same);
                             

                               -15-

Donahue  v. Pendleton  Woolen Mills, 633  F. Supp.  1423, 1435-39
                                   

(S.D.N.Y. 1986) (following Ostrofe).11
                                  

     Other courts have interpreted  Supreme Court caselaw and the

antitrust  laws more narrowly, holding that a plaintiff must be a

market participant in order to  establish antitrust injury.   See
                                                                 

Bichan  v. Chemetron  Corp., 681  F.2d 514,  519 (7th  Cir. 1982)
                           

(Section  4  protects  only   parties  injured  as  customers  or

competitors in  a defined market,  or in  a discrete area  of the

economy); see  also Winther  v. DEC  International, Inc.,  625 F.
                                                        

Supp.  100, 102-03  (D. Colo.  1985).   We need not  resolve this

conflict, because  even under  a broad  reading of  McCready, SMC
                                                            

cannot support its claim of antitrust injury.

     Read broadly, McCready extends antitrust standing to parties
                           

who  can establish that their  injury was a  "necessary step" and

the "means" employed by the conspirators to achieve their illegal

ends,  regardless of  the parties'  direct market  participation.

See McCready,  457 U.S. at  479, 484 n.21;  Ostrofe, 740  F.2d at
                                                   

745-46; Ashmore,  843 F.  Supp. at  768-70 & nn.16,  18.   Unlike
               

McCready  and her  co-plaintiffs, neither  Sullivan nor  SMC were

"necessary" instruments  to  effectuate the  alleged  conspiracy.

Denying  stadium  refinancing  was  not  a  "necessary  step"  in

                    

11These  courts reason that  the injury  suffered by  a plaintiff
used as  a means to effect  an antitrust violation  is within the
core  of  Congressional concern  underlying  the  antitrust laws,
which is  "to create a  private enforcement mechanism  that would
deter violators and deprive  them of the fruits of  their illegal
actions and  would provide ample  compensation to the  victims of
antitrust violations."   Ashmore,  843 F. Supp.  at 770  (quoting
                                
McCready, 457 U.S. at 472); see also Ostrofe, 740 F.2d at 746-47.
                                            

                               -16-

restraining competition  in the market for  professional football

franchises, nor the  "very means" by which  the defendants sought

to  do so.  Indeed,  according to plaintiff's  own complaint, the

purpose  of the NFL policy was to "exclude competitive entry into

the  business  of  professional  football  by  . .  .  television

companies, motion  picture producers, investment  bankers, owners

of other professional sports teams, home entertainment companies,

and  entertainment  companies  generally."   The  policy  is  not

alleged  to  have a  similar  anticompetitive  effect on  stadia.

Moreover, the instruments of the alleged conspiracy were the  NFL

and member club owners, not Sullivan or SMC.     

     Nor does the Ninth Circuit's holding in Los Angeles Coliseum
                                                                 

bolster  Sullivan's claim that he  suffered antitrust injury.  In

that case,  the  Los Angeles  Coliseum  and the  Oakland  Raiders

attempted  to negotiate  a deal  to relocate  the Raiders  to Los

Angeles  to  play in  the Coliseum  (the  Rams' old  home field),

following the Rams' move to Anaheim.  In its effort to block this

move, the  NFL invoked a  league rule requiring  three-fourths of

the member  teams to  approve  a team's  relocation into  another

team's league  territory.  The  Coliseum and the  Raiders brought

suit, claiming that this  was an unlawful restraint of  trade, in

violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.   1.  A jury

found  that the NFL rule violated the antitrust laws, and awarded

damages to both the Coliseum and the Raiders.  

     In  holding  that the  Coliseum had  standing to  bring this

antitrust  action, the court found that the Coliseum had suffered

                               -17-

"antitrust injury," because the NFL had "restrained competition .

.  .  among football stadia by restraining the Raiders['] attempt

to move and operate in Los  Angeles."  791 F.2d at 1364 (emphasis
                   

in  original).   Had the  Raiders been permitted  to move  to Los

Angeles,  the Coliseum would have been able to bid effectively to

have them  as a tenant.   The rule  restraining such a  move, the

court held, was  precisely of  the type that  the antitrust  laws

were designed to prevent.  Id.
                              

     The rule at issue  here posed no similar restraint  on SMC's

capacity to compete  for a pro football team's tenancy.  In fact,

in 1987, the year of the attempted sale, SMC and the Patriots had

a lease that ran  until the year  2002, regardless of the  team's

ownership.

                               -18-

2. Directness of the Injury
                           

     Sullivan argues that SMC suffered direct harm as a result of

the NFL's restraints on the stadia market.  He maintains that Los
                                                                 

Angeles Coliseum  supports this claim, and  compares SMC's status
                

to that of the Coliseum.  

     In  Los Angeles Coliseum, the Coliseum had been engaged in a
                             

bidding  struggle with  a rival  stadium for  the tenancy  of the

Oakland  Raiders when  the  NFL's invocation  of its  restrictive

relocation rule  foreclosed further negotiations,  thus depriving

the  Coliseum of expected revenue for leasing the facility to the

Raiders for  their games.  791  F.2d at 1365.   The Ninth Circuit

concluded that the NFL's illegal territorial restraints  directly

and foreseeably  restrained competition in the  stadia market, in

which  the Coliseum participated,  and that the  harm it suffered

was a  direct result of the NFL's illegal territorial restraints.

Id. 
   

     In an attempt to limit the reach of this  holding, the court

stated  that it  was "confident  that [this]  ruling will  not be

misinterpreted as being a broad endorsement of antitrust standing

for  all parties who might  have contracted with  the Raiders had

they not  been restrained in  their relocation  plans.   Football

stadia  constitute  a  special market  distinguished  from  those

comprised   by,  say,   hotels,  laundering   establishments,  or

limousine   services,  by   their   indispensable  and   intimate

connection  with professional  football and  football teams.   An

injury  such as that suffered by the Coliseum in the present case

                               -19-

cannot be  characterized fairly as an  indirect `ripple effect.'"

Id. at 1365.
   

     Sullivan  seems to argue that since  SMC, like the Coliseum,

is a participant  in the  market for football  stadia, it  enjoys

similar distinguished status by  virtue of its "indispensable and

intimate  connection  with  professional  football  and  football

teams," and  should be able likewise  to recover.   The injury to

SMC,  and its relation  to the rule  at issue in  this case, are,

however, clearly distinguishable.

     The rule at issue  in Los Angeles Coliseum affected  where a
                                                               

team could be located.  In precluding a team from relocating in a

particular area,  the rule necessarily  restrained competition in

the related market for football stadia.  Once the NFL invoked its

rule to block the  Raiders from moving into the  Rams' territory,

the Coliseum (and, indeed, all other stadia in that location) was

barred from competing with other stadia for the Raiders' tenancy.

     The rule at issue in this case had no  similar direct effect

on  SMC,  nor  on  the market  in  which  it  was a  participant.

Plaintiff claims  that the NFL rule  restricting public ownership

of NFL teams was the "but for" cause of the loss of  his stadium,

injuring SMC as follows: the NFL rejected William Sullivan's plan

to  sell 49% of his stock to  an investment bank, which, in turn,

would sell the  stock to the public; as a result, SMC did not get

refinancing; SMC  therefore could not pay its debts, nor complete

renovations; SMC could not  get an extension on its  lease (which

was contingent on the sale of Patriots' stock), and was forced to

                               -20-

file for bankruptcy.  We think that any injury suffered by SMC as

a result of the NFL  rule was indirect, and a consequence  of the

direct injury inflicted on the Patriots' owner.

     In addition, the  fact that William Sullivan, the party most

directly  harmed  by  the  alleged violation,  has  pursued  (and

indeed,  obtained   a  verdict  in)  his   own  antitrust  action

diminishes another  possible rationale  for allowing Sullivan  to

proceed  in this case.   See Associated  General Contractors, 459
                                                            

U.S.  at 542 (existence of an identifiable class of persons whose

self-interest  likely to  motivate them  to vindicate  the public

interest  in antitrust  enforcement diminishes  the justification

for allowing a more remote party to sue).12

3. Speculative Nature of the Damages
                                    

                    

12Contrary to plaintiff's assertion, the district court's finding
that there was no  significant risk of duplicative  recoveries or
danger  of complex apportionment of  damages is not  at odds with
its  determination  that  the  fact  that  William  Sullivan  was
pursuing  his own  antitrust action  weighed against  a  grant of
standing.  In considering the risk of duplicativeness and complex
apportionment  of  damages,  courts are  concerned  with  keeping
antitrust   actions  within   judicially  manageable   limits  by
curtailing litigation involving apportionment of damages among an
array  of  parties  claiming  injury.    See  Associated  General
                                                                 
Contractors, 459 U.S. at  543-45 & nn.50-51; see  also Southaven,
                                                                
715  F.2d  at  1087.    In  considering  directness,  courts  are
concerned with the  question of which among the  affected parties
are  most likely to be  motivated to pursue  an antitrust action.
While  in the  usual  case, this  would  be those  most  directly
affected by the antitrust violation,  in some cases, more  remote
parties  might be more likely  to detect and  pursue an antitrust
action.  See Associated General Contractors, 459 U.S. at 542; see
                                                                 
also  Ashmore,  843 F.  Supp.  at  766-67 (appropriate  to  grant
             
standing  to  employees  discharged  for  refusal   to  implement
discriminatory   pricing   system,  because   purchasers,  though
directly  damaged by  anticompetitive  effect of  violation,  are
least likely to discover it).  

                               -21-

     The  district court  found  that "[g]iven  that an  extended

chain  of independent events would  have had to  have occurred to

give credence to the Plaintiff's damages claim on behalf of SMC,"

the  damages claims were "at  best, highly speculative."   828 F.

Supp. at 118.  Sullivan claims that damages to SMC are measurable

in terms of the enhanced market value of the  stadium which would

have resulted from the planned renovations,  the extension of the

lease with  the  Patriots,  and  the  potential  for  deals  with

promoters for  other entertainment and  sports events.   We think

that calculating these  damages would  "necessitate wide  ranging

speculation," Southaven  Land Co.,  715 F.2d  at 1088,  about the
                                 

future value of a refinanced, renovated, debt-free stadium with a

new lease.  Because the harm to SMC was indirect, and was caused,

in part,  by independent intervening factors  (notably, its prior

serious indebtedness, as well as its failure to secure additional

sources  of commercial  financing),  we agree  with the  district

court that SMC's damages claims are "highly speculative," and are

an additional factor weighing against a grant of standing in this

case.   See  Associated  General  Contractors,  459 U.S.  at  542
                                             

(finding   that  damages  were  speculative  because  injury  was

indirect, and  because it may  have been produced  by independent

intervening factors).

     The Ninth Circuit's holding in  Los Angeles Coliseum is  not
                                                         

to the contrary.   In that case, the estimated damages claimed by

the Coliseum included  claims for  lost profits  that would  have

been earned had luxury  stadium boxes been built in  the Coliseum

                               -22-

and rented for the  1980 football season.  791 F.2d at 1366.  The

court noted these estimates  may have been unfounded due  to lack

of  proof of causation.   Id.  Nonetheless,  the court upheld the
                             

damages award, holding that even without considering the elements

in  question (lost  profits  from would-have-been  luxury boxes),

there  was  sufficient evidence,  including  attendance and  seat

price estimates offered by the Raiders, to uphold the total award

of damages.  Id.
                

     Los Angeles Coliseum is distinguishable in several important
                         

respects.   As the  Ninth  Circuit found,  the Coliseum  suffered

direct harm as a result of the NFL's antitrust violation: but for

the NFL's interference in its negotiations with the  Raiders, the

Coliseum likely would have  secured their tenancy.  Id.  at 1365.
                                                       

The damages suffered were therefore intimately connected with the

antitrust violation.   Moreover,  losses based on  attendance and

ticket  price  estimates were  the  foreseeable  result of  these

damages, and  are  precisely  the  type  of  damages  courts  can

calculate  easily.    By  contrast, the  asserted  harm  here  is

indirect, and likely the result, at least in part, of independent

intervening  factors;  nor is  the  enhanced  market value  of  a

refinanced, renovated, debt-free stadium with a new lease easy to

calculate.  It is the combination of  these factors that leads us

to conclude  that any damages to  SMC as a result  of the alleged

antitrust  violation  are  highly  speculative.   See  Associated
                                                                 

General Contractors, 459 U.S. at 542.
                   

                               -23-

     Having   considered   the   relevant    Associated   General
                                                                 

Contractors' factors, we  conclude that the balance  in this case
            

weighs against a grant  of standing.  We therefore  conclude that

Sullivan may not pursue an antitrust action on behalf of SMC.

      IV.  Application to Sullivan's Personal Damages Claims
                                                            

     Sullivan   also  claims  that  the  NFL's  restrictive  rule

directly damaged him in his individual  capacity, by charging him

with  an array  of expenses  arising out  of the  SMC bankruptcy,

including  the  payment  of  legal and  other  professional  fees

associated   with  the   bankruptcy   proceeding   itself,   lost

opportunity  to   purchase  debt  at  a   discounted  rate,  lost

compensation and  benefits, and anguish  and emotional  distress.

In  that, as the district court found, these damages "merely flow

from the  alleged injuries to SMC," 828 F. Supp. at 120, they are

that  much further removed from the injuries claimed on behalf of

SMC.  We therefore conclude, consistent  with our conclusion that

SMC did  not  suffer "antitrust  injury,"  and that  any  damages

suffered were too  indirect and speculative to  sustain an action

on its behalf, that Sullivan likewise lacks standing to pursue an

antitrust action for damages suffered in his individual capacity.

The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
                                              

                               -24-