Kaiser v. Bowlen

455 F.3d 1197, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 19307, 2006 WL 2130439
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 2006
Docket05-1050, 05-1079
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 455 F.3d 1197 (Kaiser v. Bowlen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaiser v. Bowlen, 455 F.3d 1197, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 19307, 2006 WL 2130439 (10th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

LUCERO, Circuit Judge.

If sport be a metaphor for life, then surely the sale of a National Football League franchise must be like the game itself. Sophisticated businessmen, armed at the elbow with teams of experts, including transactional lawyers, advance their offensive and defensive strategies towards the goal of obtaining a contract, shaking hands, and sealing the deal. When the ink is dry, the game is over. If a dispute arises, our role, like that of a referee, is to ensure that the parties live up to their agreements, follow the law, and play by the rules.

Fourteen years after the 1984 sale of the majority interest of the partnership that owned the Denver Broncos, Edgar Kaiser, the appellant in the present proceedings, brought suit under the contract he entered into with Pat Bowlen. This appeal is a continuation of that litigation. In the district court, Kaiser claimed that Bowlen: (1) breached a warranty in the contract by purchasing the majority interest as a nominee for his family’s company; and (2) violated a contract term that gave Kaiser a right of first refusal to buy back an interest equivalent to one offered to former Broncos’ quarterback John Elway. A jury rejected the first claim but found in Kaiser’s favor on the second.

The jury’s first determination — that Bowlen did not violate the warranty in the contract — should not be upset. Contrary to Kaiser’s objections, the jury instructions were proper and Bowlen was not judicially estopped from arguing that he did not violate the warranty. However, the jury’s verdict that the defendants breached the right of first refusal is contrary to governing Colorado law. That preferential right did not give Kaiser legal entitlement to acquire stock in a parent corporation, which is all that Elway was offered, and therefore the right to first refusal does not apply. Thus, we AFFIRM the jury verdict in favor of Bowlen on the breach of warranty claim, but REVERSE the decision not to grant judgment as a matter of law to Bowlen on the right of first refusal claim and REMAND the case with instructions to enter judgment as a matter of law in favor of Bowlen and the remaining defendants.

I

After having been introduced by the Commissioner of the National Football League (“NFL”) to then owners Gerald and Alan Phipps in 1981, Edgar Kaiser bought the Denver Broncos, an NFL franchise, for $30 million. He paid $8 million up front, and agreed to pay the remaining $22 million over time at 12% annual interest. In return, he received the right to operate the Broncos franchise, contracts with players, and all associated assets. Aside from being a fan, Kaiser had no previous involvement with the NFL or any other football organization. Immediately after the transaction, for tax purposes, Kaiser transferred ownership of the Broncos to a wholly-owned partnership, EFK Sports, Ltd. (the “Partnership”). 1

In his first season as the owner of the team, Kaiser brought in a new coach and the Broncos proceeded to win' ten games and tie for first place in their division. Financially, the franchise was less successful: Kaiser reported losses of nearly $1 *1200 million, and outside analysts suggested that the franchise’s operating losses exceeded that sum. In the second year, team performance declined, the franchise lost several million dollars, and, as if that were not enough, NFL players went on strike. Kaiser’s other enterprises suffered substantial difficulties as well, and, as a result of these problems and his continuing debt payment obligations to Gerald and Alan Phipps, he had, by his own description, a “serious cash flow problem.”

Faced with these setbacks, Kaiser attempted to turn his newly acquired interest in the Broncos into a financial gain. He entered into negotiations with an outside investor to sell his Partnership for $54 million, but the investor pulled out of the deal because he disputed Kaiser’s financial projections.

Undeterred by this failure, Kaiser continued his efforts to turn his ownership of the Broncos into a gaining asset. Bob Adams, a friend of Head Coach Dan Reeves, agreed to lend Kaiser $10 million in a transaction that was structured to permit Adams to convert the debt into a 39.2% minority interest (the “Minority Interest”) in the Partnership. United Bank of Denver also loaned money to the Broncos franchise and to the Partnership. A year later, John Adams, Bob Adams’s son and the successor in interest on the loan, and his business partner converted the loan, giving them control of the Minority Interest. All transactions involving the ownership of NFL franchises require league approval, and the league did not immediately approve the conversion. Kaiser continued to own a 60.8% majority share in the Partnership (the “Majority Interest”).

In 1983, the third season of Kaiser’s ownership, the team did better on the field and, through a savvy trade with the Baltimore Colts, acquired the rights to John Elway, the top pick in the NFL draft and later a Hall of Fame quarterback. It also did better financially, earning nearly $6 million. Despite these successes, Kaiser continued his efforts to sell his investment in the Broncos. He entered into negotiations with Pat Bowlen, a member of a “well-established ... family,” who Kaiser deemed likely to be approved by the NFL as an owner. After several meetings, Kaiser agreed to sell the Majority Interest in the Partnership to Bowlen for $51 million, $26 million in cash and the assumption of $25 million in debt. 2 When taken together with the deal with Adams, this amounted to a 100% return on Kaiser’s three-year investment in the team.

Just before the deal was to be finalized, however, Bowlen’s tax lawyer discovered an impediment. Holding the Majority Interest in the Partnership personally would make Bowlen subject to a substantial tax liability in Canada. This problem could be solved only by transferring ownership of the Majority Interest to a U.S. corporation. However, this could not be done under the original draft of the agreement governing the sale (the “Agreement”), which contained an express prohibition on transfer or assignment. To ensure the sale would proceed, Kaiser agreed to change the provision, and the final version of the Agreement permits Bowlen to transfer the Majority Interest to a subsidiary. 3

*1201 Three other clauses in the Agreement are material to this lawsuit. First, the Agreement contains a right of first refusal (“ROFR”) that provides Kaiser with the right to repurchase any part of the Broncos franchise or the Majority Interest that Bowlen may offer to sell to a third party on the same terms as that third party may purchase. Notably, this provision, negotiated at length by sophisticated transactional lawyers, does not include a term applying the stated preferential right to sales of shares in the company to which Bowlen could transfer the Majority Interest under the revised version of the Agreement. Elsewhere in the contract was a standard investment representation that stated that Bowlen “is acquiring” the Majority Interest for his “own account ...

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Bluebook (online)
455 F.3d 1197, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 19307, 2006 WL 2130439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-v-bowlen-ca10-2006.