Florida State files motion to dismiss ACC lawsuit

Sports

The Florida State Board of Trustees filed a motion Wednesday to dismiss the lawsuit the ACC filed against it in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.

In the motion, Florida State argues the ACC lawsuit is “fundamentally flawed” and an improper attempt at “procedural fencing.” They cite a “race to the courthouse” to file suit against Florida State first, its failure to secure a two-thirds member vote required by the league Constitution to initiate a lawsuit and a failure to show the FSU Board approved the grant of rights as required by Florida law, among multiple reasons.

If the court does not dismiss the lawsuit, Florida State has asked the court to stay the ACC suit in favor of the lawsuit FSU filed against the ACC in Leon County, Florida. It argues “the Florida Action is the broader and more comprehensive action, and the ACC should not be entitled to any first-filing deference as a result of its improper forum-shopping.”

The ACC filed suit against Florida State on Dec. 21 seeking declaratory judgment in defense of the grant of rights, one day before the Florida State board filed its own lawsuit against the ACC — challenging the grant of rights and $130 million withdrawal fee.

Florida State and all other ACC members signed a grant of rights with the league that runs through 2036, the length of its television contract with ESPN. The grant of rights gives the conference control over its media rights — including television revenue and home game broadcasts in all sports. In addition, any school that wants to leave the ACC would have to pay an exit fee of three times the league’s operating budget, or roughly $130 million.

Articles You May Like

Climate fund proposal dismays developing nations – as COP presidency branded ‘one of the worst’
Hyundai debuts Ioniq 9 with swivel seats to turn your 3-row SUV into a lounge
Tesla makes finding charging stations for people towing trailers easier
‘Officers aren’t the thought police’: MP says guidance on non-crime hate incidents needs to change
Reed wins in Hong Kong for 1st victory since ’21