ST. LOUIS -- A federal judge has ruled the NFL's Rams must grant season tickets to some people who bought personal seat licenses while the team was still in St. Louis, even though the team is now in Los Angeles.
U.S. District Judge Stephen Limbaugh Jr. also said Wednesday the Rams must refund deposits for other people who bought PSLs in St. Louis.
About 46,000 fans had PSLs, which give the holder the right to purchase season tickets, for the St. Louis Rams -- some at a cost of up to $1,000.
In January, NFL owners approved the Rams' move back to Los Angeles after 21 seasons in St. Louis.
It wasn't clear whether the Rams would appeal. Messages left Thursday with the team and its lawyers were not returned.
The Rams argued their move to L.A. terminated PSL agreements sold in St. Louis.
PSL holders contended not only were the licenses still valid, but they also had the right for season tickets in Los Angeles.
Though St. Louis-area fans might seem unlikely to travel nearly 2,000 miles for football games, resale of PSLs or season tickets could be lucrative once a planned $2 billion stadium in Inglewood, California, is ready in 2019.
Limbaugh's ruling differentiates between PSL contracts sold by the Rams directly and those sold by their ticketing agent, FANS Inc.
The FANS contract states a relocation of the team terminates the contract.
The judge ruled those PSL holders have the right to refunds but no rights to season tickets or PSLs in Los Angeles.
But contracts sold directly by the team do not state the PSL agreement ends due to relocation, Limbaugh said.
The Los Angeles Rams, who are playing in the Coliseum until the new stadium is ready, are 1-1 this season.
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