Court Opinion

ID: 9389259
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-04-25 13:05:15.529979+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:26.141797
License: Public Domain

State of New York                                                     OPINION
Court of Appeals                                       This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
                                                         before publication in the New York Reports.

 No. 13
 In the Matter of TCR Sports
 Broadcasting Holding, LLP,
          Appellant,
       v.
 WN Partner, LLC, et al.,
          Respondents,
 Washington Nationals Baseball
 Club, LLC,
          Respondent,
 Baltimore Orioles Baseball Club,
 et al.,
          Appellants.

 Carter G. Phillips, for appellants.
 Derek L. Shaffer, for respondent Washington National Baseball Club, LLC.
 Kenneth R. Feinberg, Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, amici curiae.

 SINGAS, J.:

       New York’s well-established rules of contract law, which apply to arbitration

 agreements, provide that courts will enforce a commercial contract between sophisticated

 and counseled parties according to the contract’s terms. In this case, two Major League

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Baseball (MLB) teams and their co-owned regional sports network are in a dispute

regarding the fair market value of certain telecast rights. By affirming the confirmation of

the second arbitration award and directing that the money judgment be vacated, we hold

the highly sophisticated parties to the terms of their agreement.

                                             I.

                               A. The Settlement Agreement

       Beginning in 1972, the Baltimore Orioles Baseball Club (the Orioles) was the only

MLB team located in the United States’ mid-Atlantic region, which encompasses

Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, Maryland. Washington, D.C. accounted for a significant

portion of the Orioles’ fan base and revenue streams while the Orioles were the only team

in that region. In 2001, the Orioles and petitioner TCR Sports Broadcasting, LLC (TCR)

established the Orioles’ Television Network. The network had the exclusive right to

telecast Orioles games in a seven-state television territory that included Washington, D.C.

(the television territory). The next year, MLB purchased the Montreal Expos and in 2004

announced that it planned to relocate the Expos to Washington, D.C. and rebrand the team

as the Washington Nationals. The Orioles objected to this plan, contending that the

Nationals’ presence in the market would harm them financially.

       In 2005, MLB, TCR, the Orioles, and the Nationals executed an agreement (the

settlement agreement) to resolve several issues associated with the Expos’ relocation to

Washington, D.C. Under the settlement agreement, TCR was converted into the Mid-

Atlantic Sports Network (MASN), a two-team regional sports network. MASN would

have the exclusive right to televise the games of both the Orioles and the Nationals in the

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television territory, except for games that were retained by MLB’s national rights

agreements. The Orioles would be MASN’s managing partner and initially own 90% of

MASN, while the Nationals’ initial ownership stake was set at 10%. Beginning in 2010,

the Nationals’ stake would increase by 1% per year until it reached 33% in 2032 and,

correspondingly, the Orioles’ stake would decrease by 1% per year until it reached 67%.

This was intended to allow the Orioles to receive reparative compensation through the

distribution of profits in accordance with its supermajority. Indeed, MLB said that the

settlement agreement would “protect the Orioles from any adverse effects caused by the

relocation.”

       The settlement agreement provided that MASN must pay the Orioles and the

Nationals an annual fee for the right to telecast their games and established those fees for

the years 2005 through 2011. Beginning in 2007, both teams were to be paid the same

amount for their telecast rights; they were paid $29 million each in 2011 for that year’s

telecast rights. For the years following 2011, the settlement agreement required MASN,

the Orioles, and the Nationals to negotiate in good faith to set the fair market value of the

telecast rights fees in five-year increments.

       The telecast rights fees are MASN’s largest expense and, thus, the amount of those

fees affects MASN’s profitability. As noted, MASN must pay the Orioles and the

Nationals the same amount for their annual telecast rights. The teams therefore share

equally MASN’s payment of telecast rights fees. However, MASN’s profits are split in

proportion to the teams’ ownership shares, with the Orioles retaining its supermajority

share. MASN’s ownership arrangement therefore incentivizes the Orioles to favor lower

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telecast rights fees to maximize MASN’s profits, while encouraging the Nationals to

advocate for higher fees.

       The settlement agreement set forth a three-step procedure for resolving telecast

rights fees disputes: (1) a 30-day mandatory negotiation period; (2) if negotiation failed,

non-binding mediation before one of two designated forums; and (3) if mediation failed,

MLB’s Revenue Sharing Definitions Committee (the RSDC) would determine the fair

market value of the telecast rights fees.1 The RSDC is an MLB standing committee

composed of three representatives from MLB teams, with rotating membership. It is

typically tasked with analyzing transactions, including telecast agreements, for purposes of

determining compliance with MLB’s revenue-sharing plan. In the settlement agreement,

the parties agreed that the RSDC would use its established methodology to value the

telecast rights. The agreement also provided that the RSDC’s determination would be final

and binding and that the parties could seek to vacate an award only on certain grounds,

including corruption or fraud.

       When it came time to set the telecast rights fees for 2012-2016—the first five-year

period contemplated by the settlement agreement—the parties failed to reach agreement.2

MASN, using an accounting based profit margin analysis known as the “Bortz

1
  This provision could be read to establish an appraisal procedure, as opposed to an
arbitration clause, given the settlement agreement’s other terms and the RSDC’s history.
However, we accept the parties’ unified understanding that the proceedings before the
RSDC were arbitrations.
2
  The Nationals’ current owners purchased the team from MLB in 2006.
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methodology,” proposed a telecast rights fee schedule starting at around $34 million for

2012 and rising to about $45.6 million in 2016. The Nationals, acting through their

counsel, Proskauer Rose LLP, rejected that proposal. The Nationals valued their rights at

more than $110 million per year on average, using a comparable markets approach.

                                 B. The First Arbitration

       After negotiations failed, the parties waived the mediation process provided for in

the settlement agreement and proceeded to the third step, arbitration before the RSDC. The

RSDC panel consisted of representatives from the Tampa Bay Rays, Pittsburgh Pirates,

and New York Mets, who were appointed by MLB’s then Commissioner of Baseball, Allan

H. (Bud) Selig. MLB staff—including Robert D. Manfred, Jr., then an MLB executive

vice president—administered the arbitration and provided legal and analytical assistance

to the RSDC.

       Proskauer represented the Nationals during the arbitration proceedings. Because

Proskauer also represented MLB—as well as the Rays, Pirates, and Mets—in unrelated

matters both at that time and in the past, MASN and the Orioles requested that the RSDC

preclude Proskauer from participating in the proceeding. Manfred concluded that the

RSDC lacked the legal authority to disqualify Proskauer, and simply granted MASN and

the Orioles a continuing objection to Proskauer’s involvement in the matter.

       In April 2012, the RSDC held a one-day hearing at which the Nationals argued that

the average fair market value for their telecast rights for 2012-2016 was about $118 million

per year. MASN and the Orioles argued that the Nationals should be paid an average of

about $39.5 million per year for that period. That summer, the RSDC informed the parties

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that it had determined that the Nationals’ telecast rights would be approximately $53

million for 2012 and would rise by about $3 million per year through 2016. However, the

RSDC did not issue its decision because Selig was attempting to negotiate a broader

settlement between the parties.

       A year later, in August 2013, with negotiations ongoing, MLB advanced the

Nationals nearly $25 million to encourage the team’s continued participation in those

settlement negotiations. That amount represented the difference between what the RSDC’s

pending award required MASN to pay the Nationals from 2012-2013 and what MASN

actually paid them for those years.3 If the parties did not settle, MLB would be repaid with

proceeds from the arbitration award. Under this arrangement, “if the RSDC issue[d] a

decision that cover[ed] 2012 and/or 2013, any payments from MASN otherwise due to the

Nationals [would] be made first to the Commissioner’s Office to cover any amounts paid.”

Alternatively, if MASN was sold to a third party, the $25 million would be paid to MLB

as part of that transaction. Manfred signed this agreement on behalf of MLB.

       The settlement negotiations ultimately failed, and the RSDC issued its decision in

June 2014. As expected, the RSDC concluded that the Nationals’ telecast rights fees would

be approximately $53 million in 2012, rising from there to nearly $67 million in 2016.

       After the RSDC issued its determination, Selig reiterated to both teams that the

settlement agreement did not authorize them “to file any lawsuit” and that the MLB

3
 MASN paid the Nationals the amounts it had proposed to the RSDC as the fair market
value of the Nationals’ telecast rights.

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constitution “expressly prohibited” litigation in court. Selig cautioned both teams that “if

any party initiate[d] any lawsuit,” he would “not hesitate to impose the strongest sanctions

available” under MLB’s constitution.

       MASN and the Orioles nevertheless commenced this CPLR article 75 proceeding

against the Nationals and MLB.4 MASN and the Orioles sought to vacate the RSDC award

under the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) on multiple grounds, including that the process

was affected by evident partiality. MASN argued, among other things, that (1) the RSDC

failed to fully disclose and remedy the conflict presented by Proskauer’s concurrent

representation of the Nationals, MLB, and each of the RSDC panel’s members or their

team; (2) the $25 million advance gave MLB an impermissible stake in the outcome of the

arbitration process; and (3) MLB controlled the arbitration process. MASN and the Orioles

also sought to have the matter remanded for a second arbitration before a different forum

unaffiliated with MLB. The Nationals cross-moved to confirm the award.

       During the pendency of the litigation, Manfred was named MLB’s commissioner.

In media reports, Manfred was quoted as saying that he thought that the settlement

agreement made clear that “the RSDC was empowered to set rights fees. That’s what they

did, and I think sooner or later MASN is going to be required to pay those rights fees.”

4
 The respondents are WN Partner, LLC; Nine Sports Holding, LLC; Washington Nationals
Baseball Club, LLC; the Office of Commissioner of Baseball; and the Commissioner of
Major League Baseball. MASN also named the Orioles and Baltimore Orioles Limited
Partnership, in its capacity as managing partner of TCR (BOLP), as nominal respondents.
MASN has represented the interests of the Orioles and BOLP throughout this proceeding,
and the parties filed joint briefs on this appeal.
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       In November 2015, Supreme Court (Marks, J.) (1) granted the amended petition to

the extent of vacating the arbitration award, (2) otherwise denied the amended petition, and

(3) denied the Nationals’ cross motion to confirm the award. With respect to MASN’s and

the Orioles’ evident partiality claim, the court rejected their assertion that the $25 million

advance gave the RSDC or MLB “an impermissible interest in the award.” The court

concluded that MASN and the Orioles established evident partiality, however, because

Proskauer was concurrently representing the Nationals in the arbitration, MLB in several

matters, and interests associated with all three members of the RSDC panel. The RSDC’s

failure to address these conflicts demonstrated evident partiality and justified vacating the

award. The court refused to refer the matter to a different arbitral forum, noting that re-

writing the settlement agreement was “outside of its authority” under the agreement’s

terms. MASN and the Orioles appealed so much of the order as denied the request to

conduct the second arbitration before a different forum. The Nationals cross-appealed the

order insofar as it vacated the RSDC award.

       The Appellate Division affirmed the November 2015 order in a per curiam

memorandum, accompanied by two concurring opinions and an opinion dissenting in part

(see 153 AD3d 140 [1st Dept 2017]). The Justices unanimously agreed that Supreme Court

properly vacated the award based on evident partiality resulting from Proskauer’s

concurrent representation. They disagreed about whether the RSDC should preside over

the second arbitration.

       Justice Andrias, in a concurrence joined by Justice Richter, determined that the

RSDC’s award “was correctly vacated based on ‘evident partiality’ ” under the FAA given

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Proskauer’s “unrelated representations at various times of virtually every participant in the

arbitration except for MASN and the Orioles” (id. at 143 [Andrias, J., concurring]). He

explained that MLB and the RSDC failed “to provide MASN and the Orioles with full

disclosure or to remedy the conflict before the arbitration hearing was held” (id.).

       This concurrence concluded, however, that there was no basis “to direct that the

second arbitration be heard in a forum other than” the RSDC (id.). After declining to

address “whether, in an exceptional case,” the Court had the power under the FAA “to

disqualify an arbitral forum” (id. at 154 n 3), the concurrence pointed out that “the

sophisticated parties, represented by experienced counsel, knew full well how the RSDC

operated, including that MLB would have significant influence over the arbitration

process” (id. at 156).    Further, the discrete cause of the RSDC’s evident partiality,

Proskauer’s concurrent representation, had been remedied and MLB had appointed new

members to the RSDC panel. Moreover, concerning the $25 million advance, the Nationals

had “offered to post a bond to guarantee repayment . . . to MLB regardless of the outcome

of the arbitration” (id. at 158). In these circumstances, therefore, MASN and the Orioles

failed to make “the extraordinary showing of grounds needed to reform the agreement or

disqualify the RSDC” (id. at 160).

       Justice Kahn concurred separately, agreeing that “the arbitration may not be referred

to another forum” but on the ground that the Court lacked power to “order that the

arbitration take place in a forum other than the one selected by the parties” (id. at 161

[Kahn, J., concurring]). Presiding Justice Acosta and Justice Gesmer dissented in part,

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concluding that the Court could “and should refer the matter to an alternative forum in the

rare circumstances presented” (id. at 163 [Acosta, P.J., dissenting in part]).5

                                C. The Second Arbitration

       As discussed in the Appellate Division order, prior to the second arbitration,

Proskauer discontinued its participation and Manfred appointed a new RSDC panel made

up of executives from different teams, the Milwaukee Brewers, Seattle Mariners, and

Toronto Blue Jays. The RSDC retained its own counsel.

       In addition, MLB and the Nationals agreed that the Nationals would repay the $25

million advance, plus interest, at least 10 days before the second arbitration started (the

prepayment agreement). If the hearing did not “commence within 14 days of its scheduled

commencement,” payment was to “be returned in full to the Nationals.” The prepayment

agreement did not relieve the Nationals of their obligation to repay the advance under the

original terms if the hearing did not occur.

       MASN and the Orioles continued to object to the RSDC as the arbitral forum. They

requested that the RSDC recuse itself and sought copies of all communications between

the RSDC and MLB concerning the dispute. The RSDC issued a procedural order denying

those requests, explaining that no member was “aware of any fact or circumstance . . . that

would call into question [their] independence or give rise to reasonable doubts about [their]

impartiality.”   The RSDC concluded that the discovery requests were inappropriate

5
 We dismissed MASN’s and the Orioles’ appeal as of right from the July 2017 Appellate
Division order on nonfinality grounds (see 30 NY3d 1005 [2017]).

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because they did not focus on the merits of the dispute and because MASN and the Orioles

failed to make “a threshold showing of a lack of independence or impartiality on the part

of any member of the RSDC.” Prior to the hearing, the Nationals repaid the $25 million

advance in accordance with the prepayment agreement.

       At the second arbitration hearing, the parties again proffered evidence regarding the

value of the Nationals’ telecast rights. In addition to the testimony presented at the two-

day hearing, the parties submitted expert reports, witness statements, voluminous

documentary evidence, and pre-hearing and post-hearing briefs. Relying again on the

Bortz methodology, MASN and the Orioles asserted that the Nationals’ license fees should

average about $40.4 million per year, with fees set at $34.5 million in 2012 and rising to

$44.3 million in 2016.       The Nationals again used a comparable-teams valuation

methodology and argued that their license fees should average around $95 million per year,

with the fees set at $87.7 million in 2012 and rising to $102.6 million in 2016.

       The RSDC concluded, in a 48-page decision, that the Nationals’ rights should be set

at approximately $55 million in 2012, rising to about $62.4 million in 2016. The average

annual value was around $59.3 million. The award stated the amounts that MASN had

distributed to the Nationals to date in telecast rights fees and profit distributions, but the

RSDC concluded that it lacked authority to enter a judgment or award the Nationals

prejudgment interest.6

6
 MASN and the Orioles directly appealed as of right to this Court from the RSDC’s second
arbitration award. We granted the Nationals’ motion to dismiss that appeal on nonfinality
grounds (see 34 NY3d 1011 [2019]).
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       The Nationals moved in Supreme Court to confirm the RSDC’s second award and

sought prejudgment interest. MASN and the Orioles opposed the Nationals’ motion,

arguing that the second award, like the first, should be vacated based on the RSDC’s

evident partiality. MASN and the Orioles contended that (1) the prepayment agreement

provided the RSDC an incentive not to recuse itself; (2) the RSDC failed to disclose its

communications with MLB; and (3) Manfred’s public statements evinced bias. MASN

and the Orioles maintained that Supreme Court should remand the matter for a third

arbitration in a forum unaffiliated with MLB. They also asserted that Supreme Court

lacked authority to grant the Nationals a money judgment or prejudgment interest.

       Supreme Court (Cohen, J.), among other things, (1) confirmed the RSDC’s second

award and (2) directed the parties to an inquest to determine the amount of prejudgment

interest to which the Nationals were entitled (see 67 Misc 3d 1242[A], *10 [Sup Ct, NY

County 2019]). After considering MASN’s and the Orioles’ arguments, the court held that

they failed to establish evident partiality. The court later entered judgment in the Nationals’

favor for more than $105 million, which included nearly $6 million in prejudgment interest.

       The Appellate Division, among other things, affirmed the judgment, holding that

MASN and the Orioles failed to demonstrate evident partiality in the second arbitration

proceeding (see 187 AD3d 623, 623 [1st Dept 2020]). The Court also rejected their

argument that Supreme Court “unlawfully modified the award in its confirmation order by

performing a calculation of the Nationals’ damages” (id. at 624).

       MASN and the Orioles appealed as of right on dissent grounds from the 2020

Appellate Division order, seeking review of the 2017 Appellate Division order (see CPLR

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5601 [d]).7 We granted MASN and the Orioles leave to appeal from the 2020 order to

review that order (see 37 NY3d 905 [2021]). Both Appellate Division orders are thus

before us on this appeal.

                                             II.

         The parties agree that the FAA governs this dispute. That statute’s “primary

purpose” is to “ensur[e] that private agreements to arbitrate,” like other contracts, “are

enforced according to their terms” (Volt Information Sciences, Inc. v Board of Trustees of

Leland Stanford Junior Univ., 489 US 468, 479 [1989]; see Matter of Salvano v Merrill

Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, 85 NY2d 173, 181 [1995]). The FAA was thus designed

to place arbitration agreements “upon the same footing as other contracts” (Volt

Information Sciences, Inc., 489 US at 478 [internal quotation marks omitted]). The parties

control the scope and parameters of their arbitration agreement. They generally may agree

to arbitrate any issue they choose, and they can set the ground rules for the arbitration

proceedings (see id.). A court interprets and enforces the parties’ arbitration agreement; it

will not rewrite the contract or impose additional terms (see Matter of Salvano, 85 NY2d

at 182).

         Parties to an arbitration agreement typically have the right to “name those who are

to be the arbitrators” or “to choose the way in which they are to be selected” (Matter of

Siegel [Lewis], 40 NY2d 687, 689 [1976]; see also Sphere Drake Ins. Ltd. v All Am. Life

Ins. Co., 307 F3d 617, 620 [7th Cir 2002], cert denied 538 US 961 [2003]). In other words,

7
    We denied the Nationals’ motion to dismiss the appeal (see 37 NY3d 986 [2021]).
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“the method for selecting arbitrators and the composition of the arbitral tribunal have been

left to the contract of the parties” (Matter of Siegel, 40 NY2d at 689 [internal quotation

marks omitted]). The parties may select industry insiders who have “a particular expertise”

in the arbitration’s subject matter and existing relationships with the parties (id.; see also

National Football League Mgt. Council v National Football League Players Assn., 820

F3d 527, 548 [2d Cir 2016]; Sphere Drake Ins. Ltd., 307 F3d at 620). Given these

considerations, a party’s “choice of an arbitrator” is “a valuable contractual right not lightly

to be disregarded” (Matter of Astoria Med. Group [Health Ins. Plan of Greater N.Y.], 11

NY2d 128, 134 [1962] [internal quotation marks omitted]).

       The FAA authorizes a court to vacate an arbitral award in defined instances. As

relevant here, 9 USC § 10 (a) (2) permits vacatur “where there was evident partiality . . .

in the arbitrators.” The Second Circuit has held that “ ‘evident partiality’ within the

meaning of” section 10 “will be found where a reasonable person would have to conclude

that an arbitrator was partial to one party to the arbitration” (Morelite Constr. Corp. v New

York City Dist. Council Carpenters Benefit Fund, 748 F2d 79, 84 [2d Cir 1984]). The

standard makes clear that arbitrators are not held to judicial standards, and prevents vacatur

of awards based on “tenuous relationships between the arbitrator and the successful party”

(id. at 85). This Court has “adopt[ed] the Second Circuit’s reasonable person standard,”

applying it when we are asked “to consider the federal evident partiality standard of 9 USC

§ 10” (U.S. Elecs., Inc. v Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc., 17 NY3d 912, 914 [2011]). Under

that standard, “[t]he party seeking vacatur must prove evident partiality by clear and

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convincing evidence” (National Football League Mgt. Council, 820 F3d at 548 [internal

quotations marks omitted]; see U.S. Elecs., Inc., 17 NY3d at 915).

       We need not address whether a court has the power to direct that a subsequent

arbitration occur before an arbitral forum not designated by the parties in their arbitration

agreement after the court has vacated an arbitration award on evident partiality grounds.

Here, the conflict was cabined in the first proceeding and did not irredeemably infect the

RSDC as a forum. Thus, Judge Marks did not err by remitting the matter to the RSDC for

the second arbitration hearing. Supreme Court vacated the RSDC’s first award on evident

partiality grounds because of the fact-specific conflict caused by Proskauer’s concurrent

representation of all the parties involved in the arbitration except MASN and the Orioles.

The Nationals no longer challenge this determination. This discrete defect was remedied

prior to the second arbitration once the parties, including the RSDC, retained new counsel.

Further, the RSDC panel members presiding over the first arbitration were replaced by new

members and, thus, the arbitrators hearing the second proceedings were not tainted by the

prior concurrent representation.     Remittal to a new arbitral forum was therefore

unnecessary to remediate the cause of the evident partiality.

       While no court has concluded that MLB’s $25 million advance to the Nationals or

Manfred’s comments established evident partiality, MASN and the Orioles argue that those

facts demonstrate that the RSDC was an improper forum to conduct the second arbitration.

We disagree.     The advance, made after the parties knew the RSDC’s informal

determination, maintained the status quo and permitted settlement negotiations to continue

in hopes of ending this complex dispute. In these circumstances, MLB did not take a

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financial stake in the outcome of this matter. In any event, the Nationals agreed to post a

bond covering the advance and, later, agreed to repay—and did repay—the $25 million

advance before the second arbitration started. Further, there is no evidence that MLB or

Manfred had any undisclosed influence on the panel members beyond that which the

parties bargained for in the settlement agreement.

       Indeed, the remand to the RSDC for the second proceeding furthered the FAA’s

primary purpose, ensuring that arbitration contracts are enforced according to their terms.

The parties specifically agreed to arbitrate telecast rights fees disputes before the RSDC,

carving out an exception to the settlement agreement’s general dispute resolution

provisions that would otherwise govern.       MASN and the Orioles knew that MLB

determined the makeup of the RSDC’s panel and also knew that the RSDC was composed

of MLB insiders. The parties also specifically agreed to arbitrate before the RSDC because

it possessed specialized knowledge concerning the complex telecast rights valuations at

issue here and an understanding of the ramifications of its decision. The parties agreed to

an industry insider controlled process with a full understanding of the commissioner’s

involvement. MASN and the Orioles cannot now complain that they received something

different than what they bargained for through the insider process they selected. We

therefore decline to reform the settlement agreement on the facts presented and, instead,

agree with the courts below that the remittal to the RSDC afforded MASN and the Orioles

the amount of impartiality that “inhere[d] in the method they” chose (National Football

League Mgt. Council, 820 F3d at 548).

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       Concerning the second arbitration award, the courts below correctly concluded that

MASN and the Orioles failed to show, by clear and convincing evidence, that a reasonable

person would have to conclude that the reconstituted RSDC was evidently partial. For the

same reasons that the $25 million advance did not necessitate a new arbitral forum or

establish evident partiality in the first arbitration, the prepayment agreement did not

establish evident partiality in the second arbitration. There was also no evidence that MLB

engaged in undisclosed activity to influence the RSDC panel members. Vacatur was thus

unwarranted under that rationale or based on the RSDC’s denial of MASN’s and the

Orioles’ discovery demands, which were premised on that theory. Moreover, a reasonable

person could conclude that Manfred’s public statements did not establish evident partiality

because the RSDC, not Manfred, made the final determination, and the statements could

not realistically be construed as a directive to the RSDC panel members.

       Although the courts below correctly confirmed the second arbitration award, the

order appealed from must be modified because Supreme Court erred by awarding the

Nationals prejudgment interest and rendering a money judgment in the Nationals’ favor.

The settlement agreement grants the RSDC the power only to determine “the fair market

value” of the telecast rights fees. The parties did not agree that the RSDC could resolve

disputes over nonpayment of such fees. Instead, remedies for MASN’s nonpayment of

those fees are governed by a different provision of the settlement agreement, which sets

forth certain requirements, including a cure period. Only after that cure period expires do

the Nationals “have a right to seek money damages.” Further, disputes over nonpayment

of the fees appear to be governed by the settlement agreement’s more general dispute

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resolution provisions. Now that our courts have confirmed the RSDC’s determination of

the fair market value of the telecast rights, the parties must resolve any disputes over

nonpayment of those fees in accordance with their agreement. While it is unfortunate that

our decision may send this protracted litigation into extra innings, that result is necessitated

by the settlement agreement’s terms.

       In the end, these sophisticated and counseled parties agreed to arbitrate their telecast

rights fees dispute before the RSDC and to follow a stated procedure concerning

nonpayment of those fees. The parties have failed to establish any basis to deviate from

that contract. Accordingly, the order appealed from and so much of the 2017 Appellate

Division order brought up for review should be modified, without costs, in accordance with

this opinion and, as so modified, affirmed.

Order appealed from and so much of the 2017 Appellate Division order brought up for
review modified, without costs, in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so
modified, affirmed. Opinion by Judge Singas. Chief Judge Wilson and Judges Rivera,
Garcia, Cannataro and Troutman concur. Judge Halligan took no part.

Decided April 25, 2023

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