Newark, NJ – A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by the Jackson Baseball Club, which accused Yankees minority owner Marvin Goldklang and his firm, M.S. Goldklang & Co., of breaching fiduciary duties during the 2020 negotiations that reshaped Minor League Baseball and led to the elimination of 43 affiliated teams.
In a December 22 opinion, U.S. District Judge Jamel K. Semper granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, finding that the Jackson Generals failed to establish that Goldklang owed them a specific fiduciary duty or that his actions directly caused their loss of Major League affiliation.
The Jackson Generals, a former Double-A club valued at roughly $25 million in 2019, alleged that Goldklang—then a member of the Minor League Baseball (MiLB) Board of Trustees and owner of three minor league clubs—used his position on the MiLB negotiating committee to favor his own teams during contract talks with Major League Baseball (MLB). Those negotiations ended with MLB’s 2021 decision to take over the minor league system, reducing the total number of affiliated teams from 160 to 117.
According to the complaint, Goldklang “demanded control” of the talks and advanced a proposal to MLB that cut 40 clubs, including the Generals, while preserving affiliations for teams he owned. The suit claimed this amounted to self-dealing and a violation of his fiduciary obligations to other MiLB member clubs.
Judge Semper, however, ruled that the complaint did not sufficiently show that Goldklang’s role as a board member created an enforceable fiduciary duty to every team in MiLB. The court also found that the claims were speculative and failed to connect his conduct to the Generals’ exclusion from the new MLB system.
“The factual allegations, even taken as true, do not plausibly demonstrate a fiduciary breach or actionable conflict of interest,” the opinion stated.
With the dismissal, the case is closed unless the Jackson Generals appeal.
A federal judge dismissed the Jackson Generals’ lawsuit alleging that Yankees minority owner Marvin Goldklang betrayed minor league teams during MLB’s 2020 restructuring talks.