Judge OKs record-setting $2B sale of Clippers
FILE - In this Nov. 12, 2010, file photo, Shelly Sterling sits with her husband, Donald Sterling, during the Los Angeles Clippers' NBA basketball game against the Detroit Pistons in Los Angeles. Only final arguments and a ruling remain in the trial to determine whether Sterling's estranged wife can sell the Clippers to former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer for $2 billion. Lawyers for Sterling plan to argue Monday, July 28, 2014, that Shelly Sterling had no right to make the deal with Ballmer, even though Donald Sterling had given her written authority to pursue a sale. |
LOS ANGELES
(AP) -- Embattled Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling lost his
attempt to block the $2 billion sale of the team to former Microsoft CEO
Steve Ballmer.
In allowing the deal to go
forward, Superior Court Judge Michael Levanas sided Monday with
Sterling's estranged wife, Shelly Sterling, who negotiated the record
sale after the NBA banned the 80-year-old billionaire for making
offensive remarks about blacks.
Shelly
Sterling sought the probate judge's approval to ink the deal after
taking away her husband's control of the family trust that owned the
team because doctors found he had signs of Alzheimer's disease and
couldn't manage his affairs.
The judge said
Shelly Sterling had negotiated a good deal and that her removal of her
husband as a co-trustee was in good faith and not part of a secret plan
to seize the team.
Shelly Sterling hugged her lawyer and wept after the judge explained his ruling from the bench.
"I can't believe it's over," she said. "This is the best thing."
An
unusual provision of the ruling bars Donald Sterling from seeking a
court-ordered delay of the sale as he appeals. His lawyers plan to seek
permission from an appellate court to file an appeal.
Sterling
was not in court for the ruling. Bobby Samini, one of his lawyers, said
Sterling reacted calmly to the news and told his lawyers they had to
keep battling on other fronts. Sterling testified during the case that
he would fight the NBA until his death.
With
lawsuits pending in state and federal courts, the ruling in Los Angeles
County Superior Court is unlikely to put an end to the bizarre saga that
began in April when a recording surfaced of Sterling scolding his young
girlfriend for bringing black men to Clippers games.
The NBA moved quickly to ban Sterling for life and fined him $2.5 million.
Sterling
was apologetic after the audio recording went viral, but his mea culpa
backfired when he criticized Lakers great Magic Johnson, who had been
photographed with Sterling's girlfriend, as a bad role model for kids
because he had HIV. Sterling was roundly condemned from locker rooms to
the Oval Office, where President Barack Obama called Sterling's remarks
"incredibly offensive racist statements."
With
the NBA threatening to seize the team and auction it, Sterling
initially gave his wife of 58 years permission to negotiate a sale but
then refused to sign the $2 billion Ballmer deal, which would be a
record price for an NBA team. He said he would sue the league instead
and then revoked the trust, which his lawyers said effectively killed
the deal.
The nonjury trial held over several
weeks focused mainly on whether Shelly Sterling properly removed her
husband as a trustee and whether her actions carried any weight after he
revoked the trust.
Donald Sterling claimed
his wife had deceived him about the medical exams. His lawyers argued
Monday that Shelly Sterling's lawyers were in cahoots with the doctors
who examined him and that his wife conspired with NBA Commissioner Adam
Silver to remove him from the trust.
"There's
no evidence, I'll repeat that as loudly as you allow," attorney Maxwell
Blecher said during closing arguments, his voice rising. "There's no
evidence that Mr. Sterling was incapable of carrying out his duties as a
co-trustee."
Levanas said there was no credible evidence that Sterling was defrauded.
Blecher said he was deeply disappointed in the judge's legal analysis.
The ruling Monday was tentative until the judge files it in writing.
NBA
spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement that the league was pleased and
looked forward to the transaction closing as soon as possible.
At the conclusion of his lengthy ruling, Levanas envisioned what might happen if Donald Sterling remained the owner.
Citing
testimony of Clippers interim CEO Richard Parsons, he said the team
would go into a "death spiral." Sponsors would withdraw, players would
quit and coach Doc Rivers would leave.
"The Clippers would suffer a massive loss of value if the team survived at all," Levanas said.
The
judge was adamant that a team owned by Donald Sterling would not draw a
price anywhere near the "stunning" $2 billion pledged by Ballmer.
Sterling, a lawyer who made a fortune as a landlord, bought the team in
1981 for $12 million.
"Ballmer paid an amazing price that can't be explained by the market," he said.
On
the witness stand, Shelly Sterling was more credible than her husband,
who was more evasive, gave inconsistent answers and presented wild
fluctuations of damage estimates, Levanas said.
He
noted that the couple presented genuine professions of love for each
other despite Donald Sterling's outburst calling his wife a "pig" after
she testified.
Outside of court, his wife said
she thought her husband would be happy with the ruling. She said she
thinks he will ultimately drop his antitrust suit in federal court
against the NBA and the lawsuit he filed in state court against his
wife, Silver and the league.
Her lawyer wasn't so sure. Asked what might stop the deal, Pierce O'Donnell said: "Donald."
"He never met a lawsuit he didn't like," he quipped.
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