NEWS+MEDIA CAPITAL GRP. LLC VS. LAS VEGAS SUN, INC.

2021 NV 45, 495 P.3d 108
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 2021
Docket80511
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2021 NV 45 (NEWS+MEDIA CAPITAL GRP. LLC VS. LAS VEGAS SUN, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NEWS+MEDIA CAPITAL GRP. LLC VS. LAS VEGAS SUN, INC., 2021 NV 45, 495 P.3d 108 (Neb. 2021).

Opinion

137 Nev., Advance Opinion /15 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

NEWS+MEDIA CAPITAL GROUP LLC, No. 80511 A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY; AND LAS VEGAS REVIEW- JOURNAL, INC., A DELAWARE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, Appellants/Cross-Respondents, FILE vs. SEP I 6 2 LAS VEGAS SUN, INC., A NEVADA EL.I7 A. E 1 CORPORATION, CLEF JURT

Respondent/Cross-Appellant, 11EF DEPUTY CLERIC

Appeal and cross-appeal from a district court judgment confirming an arbitration award in a commercial contract matter. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Timothy C. Williams, Judge. Affirmed.

Kemp Jones, LLP, and J. Randall Jones, Michael J. Gayan, and Mona Kaveh, Las Vegas; Jenner & Block LLP and Richard L. Stone, David R. Singer, and Amy M. Gallegos, Los Angeles, California, for Appellants/Cross-Respondents.

Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP and E. Leif Reid, Kristen L. Martini, and Nicole S. Scott, Reno; Pisanelli Bice PLLC and James J. Pisanelli, Todd L. Bice, and Jordan T. Smith, Las Vegas, for Respondent/Cross-Appellant.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA z lit 1to t LOJ lq-17A BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, EN BANC. 1

OPINION By the Court, STIGLICH, J.: This appeal and cross-appeal concern the standard of review a court should apply when asked to overturn the result of a private arbitration. The parties are two newspapers with an extensive contractual relationship. In their contract, they elected to submit disputes arising out of the contract to binding private arbitration, instead of the court system. When a dispute arose over amounts owed under the contract, the parties submitted the dispute to arbitration, and the arbitrator rendered an award. Neither party was fully satisfied with the award, so they both turned to the district court to seek vacatur of the portions they perceived as unfavorable to their respective sides. They had high bars to clear. Under well-settled law, an arbitration award can only be overturned for very limited reasons, and a mere error is not one of those reasons. Here, both parties argued in essence that the arbitrator's award was not simply wrong, but so egregiously wrong that it was clear the arbitrator had failed to apply the contract at all. The district court was not persuaded. Nor are we. We affirm. FACTS In 1989, the Las Vegas Sun newspaper was struggling to stay afloat financially. Pursuant to the federal Newspaper Preservation Act, the Sun entered into a joint operating agreement (JOA) with its larger

1The Honorable Kristina Pickering, Justice, did not participate in the decision of this matter.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 2 fOi I947A agSPLo competitor, the Las Vegas Review-Journal (RJ).2 Under the agreement, the two newspapers continued their separate news and editorial operations, but the RJ took over production, distribution, and advertising. Because the RJ. handled distribution and advertising, it also collected all revenue. Thus, the original agreement required the RJ to pay the Sun a sum each month to cover the Sun's news and editorial expenses. Further, the agreement required the RJ to pay the Sun a fixed percentage of total operating profits. Operating profits were defined as "Agency Revenues" minus "Agency Expenses," where "Agency" referred to the joint venture. The original agreement was relatively clear as to what costs could properly be considered deductible Agency Expenses. The agreement allocated each newspaper a budget for news and editorial expenses and a separate budget for promotional activities. The allocated budgets were considered Agency Expenses. If a newspaper desired to exceed its budget for promotional activities, the agreement was clear that it could choose to do so, but additional costs would not be included in Agency Expenses and would instead be borne by the respective newspaper. In 2005, the parties entered into an amended agreement, which tracked the structure of the 1989 agreement but included several important changes. In particular, the new agreement did not refer to "Agency Expenses." It eliminated the existing allocations for news, editorial, and

2The Newspaper Preservation Act permits joint operating agreements between competing newspapers—agreements that might otherwise violate antitrust laws—when the United States Attorney General approves the arrangement. 15 U.S.C. § 1803(b). This furthers the public interest in an "editorially and reportorially independent" press, id. § 1801, by allowing newspapers to create cost-saving synergies rather than fail. Appellant News+Media Capital Group LLC is the parent company of the RJ. SUPREME COURT OF NEVROA 3 CUI 1947A cs promotional expenses. Instead, it simply stated that the parties would bear their own editorial costs; that promotions of the RJ. must "include mention of equal prominence for the Sun" but either newspaper "may undertake additional promotional activities for their respective newspaper at their own expense"; and that "[a]ll costs, including capital expenditures, of operations under this Restated Agreement, except the operation of the Sun's news and editorial department, shall be borne by the Review-Journal." The 2005 agreement also changed the formula for calculating the profits payment. Whereas the 1989 agreement required a simple monthly payment of a fixed percentage of operating profits, the 2005 agreement was somewhat more complicated. The payment for the year 2005 was set at $12 million. Going forward, this was to be adjusted on an annual basis by the percentage change in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA), which is an accounting term roughly similar to operating profit. The 2005 agreement stated that, in calculating EBITDA for any period that included earnings prior to April 1, 2005, such earnings must not be reduced by any amounts that would have been deducted from earnings under the 1989 agreement's Appendix A.1— which apparently meant that news and editorial allocations were not deductible for that period. The 2005 agreement also listed certain items that could not be deducted from EBITDA at any time. Importantly, the agreement stated that "R]he Parties intend that EBITDA be calculated in a manner consistent with the computation of 'Retention as that line item appears on the profit and loss statement for Stephens Media Group[3] for the period ended December 31, 2004." The referenced profit-and-loss

3Stephens Media Group was a former owner of the RJ. SUPREME COURT oF NEVADA 4 1(1) l'/47A statement is in the record and shows that editorial expenses were among the costs deducted to compute "Retention." Finally, the 2005 agreement contained a mandatory arbitration clause covering any dispute as to amounts owed by the RJ to the Sun. The clause stated that the arbitrator "shall also make an award of the fees and costs of arbitration, which may include a division of such fees and costs among the parties in a manner determined by the arbitrator to be reasonable." PROCEDURAL HISTORY The instant dispute boiled over in 2018, and the Sun sued the RJ for breach of contract. The Sun alleged that the RJ had been improperly deducting its own editorial and promotional expenses from its calculation of EBITDA, thus reducing the profits payment to the Sun. Consistent with the arbitration clause, the court compelled arbitration. During arbitration, the Sun argued that the 2005 agreement did not permit the RJ to deduct its own editorial and individual promotional expenses before distributing profits to the Sun. The Sun supported this argument by pointing to the elimination of the editorial allocation, the exclusion of editorial costs for the first year, and the distinction between deductible "equal prominence promotional expenses versus non-deductible separate promotional expenses.

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2021 NV 45, 495 P.3d 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newsmedia-capital-grp-llc-vs-las-vegas-sun-inc-nev-2021.