Sports

Broncos lawsuit filed by Bowlen daughters dismissed

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It’s still not clear if a settlement has been reached.

DENVER — The lawsuit filed by two of Pat Bowlen’s daughters that was expected to determine the future ownership of the Denver Broncos has been dismissed, 9Wants to Know has learned.

The move comes just over two weeks after attorneys for both the team and for Amie Bowlen Klemmer and Beth Bowlen Wallace called a timeout, leading the judge in the case to call off what was expected to be a four-week trial.

RELATED: Broncos trial vacated — throwing into question whether a settlement was reached in ownership fight

> The video above aired in Dec. 2019

The motion to dismiss, which was obtained by 9Wants to Know, was signed Tuesday by Arapahoe County District Judge John E. Scipione. It was filed by Klemmer and Wallace, who had alleged that their father was already suffering the effects of Alzheimer’s disease when he set up a trust to run the team and determine which of his children would ultimately be named the controlling owner. They alleged that because of his illness, Pat Bowlen was subject to “undue influence” in setting up the trust and giving it the power to decide the team’s future.

Giovanni Ruscitti, the attorney for Klemmer and Wallace, said in a text message he had no comment. Dan Reilly, an attorney for the trust running the team, could not be reached immediately.  

The dismissal suggests a settlement was reached by the two sides, but it’s not clear what they may have agreed to.

All documents in the case are suppressed, meaning they are not publicly available. However, Judge Scipione ruled that “in light of the substantial public interest in the Denver Broncos organization” it was in the best interests of everyone involved “that the final resolution of these consolidated actions be made public.”

Team President Joe Ellis and two others, Rich Slivka and Mary Kelly, form the trust that has controlled the team since longtime owner Pat Bowlen stepped away from an active role with the Broncos in 2014 after announcing he’d been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. He died in 2019.

The trial had been scheduled to start July 12.

In the dismissal notice, the wrote that Pat Bowlen’s estate planning documents that set up the trust “are valid, enforceable, and reflect Patrick D. Bowlen’s intent and will.” As a result, Klemmer and Wallace agreed to no longer contend that those documents “were the result of undue influence.”

At the same time, the judge wrote that Ellis, Slivka and Kelly “have the full and complete authority” to administer the trust. He also appointed Slivka and Kelly as co-personal representatives with the power to administer Pat Bowlen’s “estate in accordance with the terms of his will.”

The trust has the power to decide the team’s future ownership.

The Broncos declined to comment on the court order or lawsuit that has been formally dismissed.

However, when asked by 9NEWS about the future of the team, the following statement from Broncos CEO Joe Ellis was provided on behalf of the PDB Trust: “Regarding the future of the Denver Broncos’ organization, our No. 1 priority remains a timely, responsible and orderly determination of ownership. There are no changes with the operation of the team, which is completely focused on a successful 2021 season.”

RELATED: Annabel Bowlen attorney: Beth Bowlen Wallace views do not reflect majority of beneficiaries

That could include naming one of Bowlen’s children as the team’s controlling owner – or selling outright one of the NFL’s premier franchises – and Colorado’s most popular, and valuable, professional team.

A ranking earlier this year by Forbes estimated that the Broncos are worth $3.2 billion – making the team the 11th most valuable NFL franchise and, in a tie with the NBA’s Boston Celtics, the 25th most valuable sports franchise anywhere in the world. With an estimated worth of $5.7 billion, the Dallas Cowboys were listed first both in the league and among all sports franchises in the world.

The controlling owner has decision-making power and is, in effect, the public face of the team.

Beth Bowlen Wallace, 50, made it clear in 2018 that she believed she was qualified and ready to take control of the team. The trust, however, has signaled repeatedly that it supports Brittany Bowlen, 31 and one of Pat Bowlen’s five children with his second wife.

RELATED: Oldest daughters lawsuit trial against Pat Bowlen trustees delayed

By any measure, Pat Bowlen’s 35 years of ownership were stunningly successful – the team won just shy of 60% of its games, claimed 13 division titles, and had as many Super Bowl appearances – seven – as losing seasons. All of it was capped off by Super Bowl wins after the 1997, 1998 and 2015 seasons.

But by the time that last championship season rolled around, Pat Bowlen had stepped away from an active role with the Broncos. 

In the void left by his illness and death, the struggle to chart the team’s future played out largely behind the scenes and through carefully worded public statements.

“There is substantial and overwhelming evidence that Mr. Bowlen lacked the required capacity in 2009,” Ruscitti, the lawyer representing Wallace and Klemmer, said in a statement when the petition was filed on Sept. 13, 2019. “As a result, Ms. Klemmer and Ms. Wallace have filed a petition asking the court to decide that issue, the related issue of whether the 2009 trust — which is the document under which the trustees have derived their power and authority — is valid, and whether Mr. Bowlen was subjected to undue influence.”

Reilly, the lawyer for the trustees, released the following statement after the daughters filed that 2019 petition:

“It is sad and unfortunate that Beth Bowlen Wallace and Amie Bowlen Klemmer have elected to contest their father’s plan and attack his personal health. This complaint represents the latest effort in their public campaign to circumvent Pat Bowlen’s wishes.

“The evidence in the courtroom will show Pat Bowlen was fully capable of establishing and understanding his trust and estate plan when it was created in 2009. Mses. Wallace and Klemmer’s current position about their father’s supposed mental incapacity in 2009 was not raised by them or their lawyers until after 2014, when Ms. Wallace was privately told by the trustees that she was not capable or qualified to serve as controlling owner.’’

Besides their roles as trustees, Ellis is also the Broncos’ chief executive officer and president and Slivka serves as the team’s executive vice president and general counsel. Mary Kelly previously served as Pat Bowlen’s personal attorney.

The trial had been originally scheduled for last September before being delayed because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Even before the suit was filed, it was clear that within the family and the trust there was disagreement about who should be tapped to run the team.

Wallace took the preemptive step of announcing through a press release on May 31, 2018, that she was ready to take control of the team.

RELATED: Ellis says Broncos could be sold if Bowlen children don’t approve Brittany as father’s successor

“It is my desire to lead this team with the same passion my father did and help the Broncos become Super Bowl champions again,’’ Wallace said in that release. “I have the ambition, experience and drive, and my mentor in running a winning NFL franchise is the best in the business – my father.”

The trustees then responded with their own statement later that day that read in part: “As trustees honoring the clear wishes of Pat, we have thoroughly evaluated whether Beth is capable of succeeding her father as controlling owner. We have determined that she is not capable or qualified at this time.’’

At the same time, the trustees sent multiple strong signals that Brittany Bowlen is the child they had identified to one day replace her father as controlling owner.

Ellis has previously stated the trust’s succession plan that includes identifying a new controlling owner would require unanimous approval among the Bowlen family – and that without that the team would be put up for sale.

“I stand by that,’’ Ellis said in an interview with 9NEWS in January. “If there’s not consent from a few people that complicates the transition of ownership over to another child – and that’s something that they’re going to have to work out. They’re going to have to work that out, we (the trustees) can’t work that out for them. We’ll see if they’re able to do that.

“I would add from a timeline perspective that the community, the fans, the organization, and the beneficiaries – the family – deserve resolution at some point. Right now we’re focused on the trial and we’ll go to court. I believe we’ll prevail but we’ll see and we’ll go from there. Again, I think it’s important to so many different parties that this gets worked out sooner rather than later.‘’

Bowlen bought the team in 1984 and ran it until the Broncos and his wife, Annabel, announced in July 2014 he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. He stepped away from the team and out of public limelight, struggling with the illness in private. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, on Aug. 3, 2019 – less than two months after his death. Klemmer and Wallace attended the ceremonies as did four of the five children Pat had with Annabel, including Brittany.

Contact 9Wants to Know investigator Kevin Vaughan with tips about this or any story: kevin.vaughan@9news.com or 303-871-1862.

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