No.

CourtColorado Attorney General Reports
DecidedJanuary 31, 1992
StatusPublished

This text of No. (No.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
No., (Colo. 1992).

Opinion

Honorable C. Thomas Blickensderfer State Senator State Capitol Building Denver, Colorado 80203

Dear Senator Blickensderfer:

This responds to your November 18, 1991 letter requesting this office examine the legal sufficiency of the Memorandum of Lease ("MOL") between the Denver Metropolitan Major League Baseball Stadium District ("District") and the Colorado Baseball Partnership in 1993, Ltd., a Colorado Limited Partnership ("Partnership"). As we discuss below, setting aside public policy and business judgment concerns, we have concluded a court would find that the arrangement entered into between the District and the Partnership does not violate Colorado law. It must be emphasized that we were not parties to previous lease negotiations and are not in a position to critique each and every judgment call that took place. Moreover, this opinion has not taken into account legislation that has been proposed to the 1992 General Assembly concerning the District. Finally, we recognize that the MOL is a preliminary agreement and that the parties still must address numerous issues in final negotiations.

While we have attempted to fully answer your questions, we must caution you that our inquiry was based upon facts which my staff was able to obtain without benefit of formal witness or document subpoena powers. The inquiry is necessarily limited to what we have been provided through the voluntary cooperation of the District, the Partnership, and others. The parties to the MOL have been fully cooperative recognizing the inherent limitations of an ongoing negotiation for the completion of a multi-million dollar transaction.

As you know, the legislation creating the District (§§32-14-101, et seq. C.R.S. (1991 Supp.)) gives the board of directors broad powers to lure baseball to Denver and to construct a baseball facility. Decisions made by the District within its legal authority are a matter of business judgment and our review does not address the wisdom of those policy choices. These choices can be evaluated by you and the public in other, more appropriate forums. Suffice it to say that reasonable people can differ as to the policy tradeoffs made by the District in its lease negotiations. Frankly, in retrospect, we might have made different policy decisions regarding allocation of stadium revenues. However, at the time the MOL was made the District was engaged in a highly public and multicity competition to attract major league baseball to this area. The lease negotiations occurred at a time when Colorado's success was uncertain, even doubtful. It is in that context the Board made most of the policy decisions reflected in the MOL.

Within this framework for our review, we have concluded that a court would likely find the MOL does not violate statutory or constitutional provisions. This is not to say nothing remains to be done in the final lease negotiations. We have simply concluded that a court would find the MOL is presently a binding and enforceable contract as to the issues raised and discussed herein. Our review also makes clear that the lease negotiations raise important fundamental policy issues beyond the scope of this opinion concerning the operation and accountability of public boards such as the District, especially when such entities have significant responsibilities to levy and spend tax revenues.

QUESTIONS PRESENTED AND CONCLUSIONS

1. Is the MOL legally binding and enforceable in its current form, as to both procedural regularity by the District and contractual validity?

Yes.

2. Are any of the issues addressed in the MOL severable from it without making the agreement voidable?

No, but the parties may agree to alter the MOL.

3. Were there any unlawful conflicts of interests among the District's Board of Directors during the negotiation and adoption of the MOL, pursuant to § 32-14-108, C.R.S. (1991 Supp.)?

Evidence we reviewed disclosed an apparent conflict of interest by one member of the Board (Mr. Roger Kinney), but the conflict did not taint the validity of MOL negotiation.

4. Does the failure of the MOL to discuss capital improvements violate the Denver Metropolitan Major League Baseball Stadium District Act, §§ 32-14-101 to 32-14-133, C.R.S. (1991 Supp.) ("Act")?

No.

5. Does the MOL violate the Act by allowing the Partnership to operate and manage the stadium without competitive selection for an independent professional management organization?

6. Is the sales tax election voidable on the ground that the wording of the ballot question is misleading?

7. Does the MOL violate the Colorado Constitution by permitting either an unlawful donation of public funds or an improper commingling of public and private funds.

ANALYSIS

I. Contract Analysis

A. Binding Contract

Colorado law is well settled that a preliminary lease, even where a subsequent formal document is anticipated, is a binding contract between the parties so long as it encompasses certain essential terms.

Under the authorities, to create a valid contract of lease but few points of mutual agreement are necessary. First, there must be a definite agreement as to the extent and bounds of the property leased; second, a definite and agreed term; and, third, a definite and agreed price of rental, and the time and manner of payment.

Carlson v. Bain, 116 Colo. 526, 182 P.2d 909 (Colo. 1947). See also Cook v. Hargis,164 Colo. 368, 435 P.2d 385 (1967) (letter from tenant to landlord setting forth these essential terms was adequate as a lease agreement).

In this instance, it is clear that these essential elements are satisfied by the MOL dated March 14, 1991 (the MOL is attached as Exhibit A). First, no question exists regarding the facility to be leased to the Partnership. Second, the term is 17 years. Third, rent, in addition to the Partnership's agreement to pay all operation and maintenance ("O M") costs, is payable by the Partnership pursuant to a definitive calculable formula. Fourth, rent is due and payable pursuant to paragraphs 2(a), 2(b) and 2(e) of the MOL.

The interim character of the MOL, in that the parties intend to execute a formal lease agreement incorporating the MOL terms and other items at a later date, does not change the fact that a court would likely find the MOL remains a binding contract until a novation occurs by the final lease agreement.

Two rules on this subject are well established: first, if the parties intend not to be bound until they have executed a formal document embodying their agreement, they will not be bound until then; and, second, the mere fact that the parties contemplate memorializing their agreement in a formal document does not prevent their informal agreement from taking effect prior to that event.

Ellis Canning Co. v. Bernstein, 348 F. Supp. 1212, 1222 (D. Colo. 1972).

Here, the District and the Partnership intended to be bound. They not only contemplated a formal document in the future, they also explicitly agreed that the ". . .

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