The Donald Sterling saga may finally be over for good. A judge has ruled that Shelly Sterling did indeed have the legal standing to decide matters of the family trust on her husband's behalf, clearing the way for Steve Ballmer to officially take over the team.
A sale of the Clippers to Ballmer went through on May 29 and was made possible because Sterling was found to be "mentally incapacitated." According to the terms of the family trust, this gave Shelly Sterling the authority to make decisions on the trust's assets -- most notably the Clippers -- without also getting Donald's signature. But Donald Sterling sued in probate court, arguing that the neurological exam was conducted under false pretenses and does not accurately describe his mental state.
Court finds Shelly acted properly and was acting as sole trustee when she entered into deal with Ballmer.
— Dan Woike (@DanWoikeSports) July 28, 2014
Judge says Shelly "clearly had to authority" to engage in contract with Ballmer.
— Dan Woike (@DanWoikeSports) July 28, 2014
The sale window to Ballmer was supposed to end on July 15, but it was extended until August 15 so the trial could finish. Had the judge ruled in favor of Donald Sterling, the window could have expired, forcing the NBA to go through the termination process it was prepared to use until the sale to Ballmer happened. Were that to succeed, the league would have controlled the team and auctioned it to the highest bidder. But there was a risk that Donald Sterling wouldn't officially be out of the picture by the start of the season, which is why players suggested they might boycott next season if a favorable ruling didn't happen.
The trial began in early July, despite attempts by Sterling's team to delay the start. The trial was supposed to focus mostly on the legality of Shelly Sterling's decision and whether the mental incapacity diagnosis was appropriate, but eventually veered into other topics, most notably the value of the team should Donald Sterling remain owner. While Donald Sterling can still sue for monetary damages, he will not be able to appeal the judge's ruling on ownership as the court ruled 1310(b) was not just for life and death cases, making it a clean sweep for Shelly Sterling.
Explaining the Details
The judge said the issue of the 1310(b) provision was the hardest issue to decide on, but found it does not apply to just life and death cases as Donald Sterling had argued. The judge said the trust would lose $400 million if the provision wasn't used and said he believed the "death spiral" theory of interim Clippers CEO Richard Parsons.
Donald Sterling can still sue the trust for monetary damages, but he would essentially be suing himself. As part of an earlier deal with Shelly Sterling, the NBA is indemnified in any lawsuit.
Shelly walks out of the court with tears of joy in her eyes. "I'm just happy it's over."
— Dan Woike (@DanWoikeSports) July 28, 2014
Update: The NBA has issued a statement on the court's ruling:
Here is the statement from the NBA on Sterling, Clippers and Ballmer: pic.twitter.com/FCSJwqyqlD
— Jeff Zillgitt (@JeffZillgitt) July 28, 2014