Not to stir the hornets' nest back up, but I found the 8th Circuit decision in
Brady that DBoys was talking about. Basically, the district court judge (Nelson) ruled that the Norris-LaGuardia Act, which prevents courts from issuing injunctions in labor disputes, no longer applied after the NFLPA decertified. Accordingly, Judge Nelson found that she was free to enjoin the NFL's lockout, and she did so.
The 8th Circuit then overturned her ruling because it held that the Norris-LaGuardia Act applies so long as there is a labor dispute, even after the union decertifies. Therefore, the injunction was lifted as a violation of Norris-LaGuardia, and the lockout was back on.
Assuming that decision is applied in the 2nd Circuit (which it doesn't have to be), all it says is that the district court can't issue injunctions, even after decertification. Thus, in the NBA's case, the players' assn. couldn't ask the court to stop the lockout, even after they've decertified. Presumably, nor could they seek an injunction asking the court to exercise its equitable powers to bar other unilateral actions taken by the league.
Here's what's important: While the 8th Circuit said that Norris-LaGuardia continued to apply, they
did not say that the non-statutory exemption would continue to protect the NFL from anti-trust liability post-decertification. Therefore, if you apply that case to a hypothetical NBPA decertification, the players could not seek injunctions,
but they could still sue under Section 1 of the Sherman Act and still seek treble damages. So basically the players can't ask the court to undo, say, a unilaterally imposed $40M hardcap, but they can still sue for hefty damages after the fact.
The link below has the original text of the decision embedded, but here's a quote from the commentary that sums it up:
Critically, Colloton did not rule on whether the traditional antitrust exemption extended by the courts to labor-management negotiations extended past the date of the union’s disclaimer. This means the league’s franchise operators may still be liable for antitrust damages arising from the lockout.
http://www.antitrusthall.com/?p=260So... why not take the reasoning applied for extending Norris-LaGuardia post-decertification and use it to extend coverage of the labor exemption as well? The 8th Circuit went through extensive analysis demonstrating that a "labor dispute" is what matters for coverage under Norris-LaGuardia, and that
a labor dispute can exist even without a union. On the other hand, a labor-management relationship (which requires a labor union), is what triggers protection under the labor exemption. So it's apples to oranges. Here's what they said about it:
Given our conclusion that the preliminary injunction did not conform to the provisions of the Norris-LaGuardia Act, we need not reach the other points raised by the League on appeal. In particular, we express no view on whether the League's nonstatutory labor exemption from the anti-trust laws continues after the union's disclaimer. The parties agree that the [Norris LaGuardia] Act's restrictions on equitable relief are not necessarily coextensive with the substantive rules of antitrust law, and we reach our decision on that understanding.