WHY ONLINE FANTASY SPORTS ARE LEGAL
6 July 2007
Playing it safe in the United States
Fantasy sports players will be feeling more confident
about the legality of the pastime this week following a
ruling in a federal court in New Jersey, which found
that such activities do not constitute illegal gambling.
CNET News carried a perspective piece on the issue
prepared by San Francisco information technology and
intellectual-property lawyer Eric J. Sinrod which is
well worth reading.
In the case of Humphrey v. Viacom, the plaintiff sued
CBS Television Network, Sportsline.com, The Walt Disney
Company, ESPN, The Hearst Corp., Vulcan Inc., Vulcan
Sports Media and The Sporting News. The gist of his
complaint was that the defendants allegedly operate
fantasy sports sites in violation of various state
gambling laws. He sought to recover losses incurred by
the residents of the states who participated in these
sports games.
The plaintiff claimed that the registration fees paid by
fantasy sports leagues participants are tantamount to
wagers or bets, and he believed that he is entitled to
recover these fees under state gambling loss-recovery
statutes. The defendants moved to dismiss the
plaintiff's complaint, arguing that it does not state
proper claims under governing law.
Fantasy leagues permit participants to manage virtual
teams of professional players in a sport during a
particular season and to compete against other
participants based on the actual statistical performance
of those players. Fantasy sports leagues have become
very popular recently as a result of supporting services
offered on Web sites like those operated by the
defendants. Such sites provide real-time statistical
updates and tracking, message boards and even expert
analysis.
In essence, fantasy sports leagues enable participants
to use their knowledge of players, strategy and
statistics to manage their own virtual teams premised on
the true performance of professional athletes during a
given season. Participants pay a fee to purchase a
fantasy sports team and the supporting services.
The fantasy team with the best performance at the end of
the season, premised on true statistics of players
chosen by the participant, is named the winner. Minor
prizes, like T-shirts, are given to participants whose
team wins a league. Managers of best teams across
leagues are given larger prizes, such as flat-screen
TVs. Such prizes are disclosed prior to the commencement
of a fantasy sports season and do not depend on how many
managers participate or the total registration fees
received by the defendants.
Sinrod reported that in this context, the federal judge
sided with the defendants and shot down the plaintiff's
complaint on several grounds.
First, the plaintiff failed to identify any participants
who lost money to the defendants. Therefore, there is
nobody in particular on whose behalf he can recover.
More importantly, the judge recognised that it would be
absurd to conclude that the combination of an entry fee
and a prize constitutes gambling. Indeed, if that were
the case, spelling bees, beauty contests, golf
tournaments and the like also would have to be gambling.
When an entry fee is paid unconditionally and the prize
is for an amount certain and is guaranteed to be won by
a participant, a contest does not morph into gambling
under the law.
In addition, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement
Act of 2006, which broadly prohibits Internet gambling
financial transactions, establishes that fantasy sports
leagues are not gambling operations. This is because all
prizes are announced in advance and do not depend on the
number of participants and the amount of fees paid by
them, the winning outcomes reflect knowledge and skill
of participants and are based on accumulated statistical
results of the performance of individual athletes, and
winning outcomes are not based on the score,
point-spread or any performance of a single real-world
individual or team.
[Ed. Note: Fantasy sports are also legalised by their
'carve out' status in American law, along with online
horseracing and state lotteries.]
Thus, fantasy sports leagues that operate in this
fashion do not need to worry about gambling accusations.
If anything, the plaintiff's lawsuit has helped the
fantasy sports leagues by leading to a clean bill of
health from a federal judge.
Of course, it is imperative that the operators of
fantasy sports leagues not take so much comfort from
this ruling that they alter their business plans such
that they stray into what could be perceived as actual
gambling activities. As long as they stick to the
formula outlined by the judge, they should be fine.
http://news.com.com:80/2010-1014_3-6194654.html?part=rss&tag=2547-1_3-0-20&subj=news
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