But I don't see where this was an appeals court ruling, this was an initial trial from what I understand. It was up to Brady/NFLPA as to what they wanted ruled on. The filed an appeal to the NFL punishment, but not another court's ruling. They were the plaintiff in an initial trial and filed a suit based upon the merits they wanted the judge to rule on. The judge could have expanded it depending on the merits and could have filed subpoenas, bit he likely knew it didnt matter. As far as I understand it.
Unless I do not know something important I believe people fundamentally misunderstand this process. Berman didn't rule in appeal, he ruled in trial which can be appealed. Furthermore, he didn't choose to rule on the process of punishment voluntarily, he was asked to rule on specific items in the complaint filed by brady and the nflpa. The judge can choose to go beyond that, but only when pertinent to the complaint items. It was not Berman who kept it to process, and thus elminated the leagues options to appeal, it was brady and nflpa attorneys. Had those complaints been dismissed (ruled in leagues favor) with no possibility to amend (with prejudice) brady would have lost, however, he could have had a chance to amend and expand to the fact a if berman had dismissed without prejudice. Had berman expanded beyond the complaint's scope without reason and that were believed to be a procedural error the NFL could have appealed on that expansion.
I believe this to be accurate. I have sued a lot of people in my prior job and have had cases go either way. However, I am not an attorney (even though some of the ones I have had working for me said I should be one).
Because the NFL and NFLPA had a collectedly bargained arbitration hearing, the NFL could only file a petition to confirm the decision and the NFLPA could only file a petition to appeal the ruling. And there are limited reasons to appeal the arbitration ruling and all those reasons focus in on the process of the arbitration hearing, not retrying the facts. So, there would be no reason the judge would even rule on those facts or ask for Brady's phone (though he did talk about them).
Here is a press release from the NFLPA on the petition they filed.
From the NFLPA:
NFLPA FILES PETITION ON BEHALF OF TOM BRADY IN MINNESOTA DISTRICT COURT
The NFLPA filed an appeal today on behalf of Tom Brady in U.S. District Court of Minnesota to vacate the four-game suspension upheld by Goodell based on the following:
There was no direct evidence in the Wells Report so the discipline was based on a made up general awareness standard to justify such absurd and unprecedented punishment.
Roger Goodell delegated his disciplinary authority to Troy Vincent, violating our Collective Bargaining Agreement, and then as the arbitrator, he ruled on his own improper delegation, botching basic arbitration law and fundamental fairness.
A collectively bargained policy already exists regarding tampering with equipment that provides only for fines, not suspensions. Troy Vincent ignored this policy when he issued his initial discipline. The policy that Vincent did apply to Brady only covers teams and team executives, not players. The NFL once again violated players right to advance notice of discipline to try to justify unprecedented punishment.
No player in NFL history has served a suspension for non-cooperation or obstruction. And, in this case, the evidence is paper-thin.
The appeals hearing held on June 23, 2015 defied any concept of fundamental fairness and violated the principles of our CBA.
The collective bargaining agreement provides procedures and guidelines for how the Commissioner conducts disciplinary hearings and the rules applicable to players. The NFL chose to violate these principles.
By pursuing this petition, our union is protecting the rights of Tom Brady and of every NFL player past, present and future.
