Advertisement

This Time, L.A. Has Problems With the Angels

City of Los Angeles files legal brief that asks the Orange County Superior Court to reject the team's attempt to change its name.

January 20, 2005|Bill Shaikin, Times Staff Writer

The Angels now face legal opposition from both of the cities in their new name. The city of Los Angeles lined up behind the city of Anaheim on Wednesday, arguing in a legal brief that the Orange County Superior Court "should reject the Angels' attempt to profit from the Los Angeles name they abandoned long ago."

Los Angeles will formally ask the court to consider its views today, in support of the lawsuit in which Anaheim charges that the team's name change to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim violates their stadium lease.


Advertisement

The Angels can ask the court to ignore those views, and even if they don't ask, the court is under no obligation to consider them.

"If the issue is one of contract interpretation between the team and the city of Anaheim, the comments of a party not a part of the contract are not going to be relevant," said Sheldon Eisenberg, a Santa Monica lawyer who handles intellectual property and entertainment litigation.

In November, the Los Angeles City Council approved a resolution opposing the name change, and council President Alex Padilla directed City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo to explore whether the city should pursue legal action. Deputy City Atty. Edward Jordan, who filed the brief, acknowledged the Council did not specifically authorize legal intervention.

"There was no formal resolution adopted," Jordan said.

Dodger owner Frank McCourt said last week that his team opposed the name change but would refrain from supporting Anaheim in court. Howard Sunkin, the Dodgers' senior vice president of public affairs, said the team did not orchestrate Wednesday's filing but did applaud it.

"This just reiterates that Los Angeles has one team and it's the Dodgers," he said.

In the brief, Los Angeles calls it "improper" for the Angels to use the name of a city in which they do not play and to which they do not pay taxes. The city did not object when the NFL's Rams retained the Los Angeles name upon moving from the Coliseum to Anaheim in 1980.

"The Angels were here, went to Anaheim and abandoned the name," Jordan said. "There's no connection between the Angels and the city of Los Angeles any more."

The team was born the Los Angeles Angels in 1961, became the California Angels upon moving to Anaheim in 1966 and became the Anaheim Angels in 1997.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|