Opening salvos in Sonics v. Seattle trial

Published 10:54 pm Monday, June 16, 2008

SEATTLE — A deal is a deal, and the SuperSonics should stay, a Seattle lawyer told a judge Monday as a federal trial began over the team’s KeyArena lease.

SuperSonics owner Clay Bennett is trying to move the team — Seattle’s oldest professional sports franchise — to his hometown of Oklahoma City, two years before the lease expires. He sat mostly expressionless at the defense table, and at one point offered a lozenge to a spectator in a Sonics jacket who coughed repeatedly.

Bennett is hoping to pay Seattle no more than $10 million in lost rent for the next two seasons.

In his opening statement, Seattle lawyer Paul Lawrence said the city only agreed in the mid-1990s to spend $84 million to renovate the old Seattle Coliseum — now KeyArena, the NBA’s smallest venue — because the team agreed to stay until 2010. He told U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman the city has every right to hold the Sonics to that bargain, and he asked her to force them to stay.

Bennett knew full well that the Sonics had been losing money at KeyArena and assumed that risk when his group bought the team for $350 million in 2006, Lawrence said.

“These are all sophisticated businessmen who know what it means to sign and assume a contract,” he said. “They can afford the losses they knew were coming.”

The opening presentation included photos of Sonics banners hanging from the rafters and excerpts from e-mails in which Bennett and other owners discussed their eagerness to move the team soon after buying it. Lawrence said the economic, cultural and charitable benefits the Sonics bring to Seattle are unique, hard to quantify and not something that can be simply paid off.

As court adjourned Monday, about 1,000 fans rallied outside the courthouse, waving signs and Sonics flags and chanting “Save our Sonics.” They cheered Lawrence as he left the building but courthouse security let Bennett avoid the crowd through a different exit.

Typically, courts are reluctant to force parties to fulfill contract obligations against their will. Instead, they require monetary damages to make the injured party whole. But the Sonics lease specifically states that either side can force the other to fulfill its obligations.

Forcing the Sonics to honor the lease would give the city two additional years to potentially reach a deal for a new stadium, Lawrence said. He noted the NBA’s approval to move the team is only good for one year.

Sonics attorney Brad Keller began his opening statement by saying there were two key tenets to the Sonics lease: One, that they would play their home games at KeyArena for 15 years; and two, that the city would provide an “economically feasible” venue. Nowadays, KeyArena is “terrible,” economically and physically, compared to other arenas in the league, he said.

The Sonics insist they would lose as much as $65 million over the next two years in Seattle, but would make an estimated $18.8 million in the same period if allowed to move, because there’s a better venue in Oklahoma City.

The 1994 lease agreement that was supposed to be a win-win for Seattle and the team has become a lose-lose, Keller said, and forcing the team to stay would be like forcing an estranged husband and wife to share the same roof.

“Like many relationships do, this relationship broke down,” Keller said.

He said the Sonics spent millions of dollars working with lawmakers to get a deal for a new arena, to no avail, and suggested that the Legislature’s reluctance is an indicator of the state’s indifference to the team. The city says the team’s demands for a $500 million stadium were so unreasonable as to have been designed to fail.

KeyArena “hasn’t been a competitive NBA arena for many, many years,” Keller said — especially since Safeco and Qwest fields opened, dramatically boosting the local supply of modern, luxury sports suites. “Nothing has been done to fix it. … You can’t generate the kind of revenues that are needed to sustain an NBA franchise.”

Keller also alleged that the city’s real intent in bringing the lawsuit is to bleed the Professional Basketball Club, in hopes it will sell to a local group. He cited a PowerPoint slide that former Sen. Slade Gorton, a lawyer hired by the city, displayed during a strategic meeting at the home of former Sonics chief executive Wally Walker. The slide said the role of Gorton and others would be to “increase pain” of trying to leave.

In one July 2007 e-mail, Walker wrote to businessman John Stanton, part of the Sonics previous ownership group, saying he had met with city staff whose goal was to make the prospect of leaving “too expensive and too litigious” for Bennett.

Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels was the first witness to testify, describing the cultural worth of the Sonics — the first male professional franchise in Seattle to win a national title since the Metropolitans won the Stanley Cup in 1917. The Sonics won the NBA championship in 1979.

Nickels said $35 million remains to be paid on the principal from KeyArena’s renovation.

Under cross examination by Keller, Nickels acknowledged the arena doesn’t meet league standards, and that hurts the financial health of the Sonics and of Seattle Center, where the arena is located. Nickels also acknowledged the KeyArena revenue-sharing agreement the Sonics have with the city is a financial hardship for the team and no longer makes sense.

But Virginia Anderson, the former director of Seattle Center, testified that she believes the Sonics’ financial woes have much to do with the quality of their teams over the last several years. With a better record, the team would sell more tickets, boost its advertising revenue and sell more beer and sausages, she said. And if they made the playoffs they could double their revenue, she said.

In a cyclical sports business, “The Sonics seem to me to be in the trough,” she said. “There will be a time when it will come back up.”

In fact, when the former team owners designed the renovated KeyArena in the mid-1990s, they didn’t want a bigger venue because they feared it would sit mostly empty if the team had losing seasons, she said.

Bennett was expected to be the second witness on Tuesday.