The Baseball Trust
A History of Baseball's Antitrust Exemption
Abstract
The impact of antitrust law on sports is in the news all the time, especially when there is labor conflict between players and owners, or when a team wants to move to a new city. And if the majority of Americans have only the vaguest sense of what antitrust law is, most know one thing about it—that baseball is exempt. This book illuminates the series of court rulings that resulted in one of the most curious features of our legal system: baseball's exemption from antitrust law. The book provides a history of the game as seen through the prism of an extraordinary series of courtroom battles, ranging from 1890 to the present. The book looks at such pivotal cases as the 1922 Supreme Court case which held that federal antitrust laws did not apply to baseball; the 1972 Flood v. Kuhn decision that declared that baseball is exempt even from state antitrust laws; and several cases from the 1950s, one involving boxing and the other football, that made clear that the exemption is only for baseball, not for sports in general. The book reveals that for all the well-documented foibles of major league owners, baseball has consistently received and followed antitrust advice from leading lawyers, shrewd legal advice that eventually won for baseball a protected legal status enjoyed by no other industry in America.
Keywords
Antitrust law; Labor conflict; Court rulings; Baseball; Courtroom battles; Flood v. KuhnDOI
10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780199930296.001.0001ISBN
9780199930296, 9780199930296, 9780199389728, 9780199930302, 9780199974696, 9780190254575Publisher
Oxford University PressPublisher website
https://global.oup.com/Publication date and place
New York, NY, USA, 2013Classification
History of the Americas
Competition law / Antitrust law
Social and cultural history


Download
Web Shop