Klesch & Co. v. Liberty Media Corp. , 234 F. App'x 829 ( 2007 )


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  •                                                                          F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES CO URT O F APPEALS
    April 26, 2007
    TENTH CIRCUIT                       Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    K LESC H & C O MPA N Y LIM ITED,
    Plaintiff-Counter-                        No. 05-1206
    Defendant - Appellant,
    v.                                             (D. Colorado)
    LIBER TY M ED IA CO RPO RA TION;                (D.C. No. 01-D-1456 (CBS))
    JOHN C. M ALONE; ROBERT R.
    BENNETT,
    Defendants-Counter-
    Claimants - Appellees.
    OR D ER AND JUDGM ENT *
    Before HA RTZ, O’BRIEN, and M cCO NNELL, Circuit Judges.
    Claiming that Liberty M edia Corp. expropriated a valuable business
    opportunity, Klesch & Company, Ltd., brought a diversity action in the United
    States District Court for the District of Colorado. Klesch lost at trial and now
    appeals, challenging the court’s instructions (1) that the jury could not award
    damages to Klesch under the last of several successive written agreements signed
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent except under the
    doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited,
    however, for its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th
    Cir. R. 32.1.
    by Klesch and Liberty M edia; (2) that Klesch’s misappropriation claim required
    proof that Liberty M edia had profited from the misappropriation; and (3) that
    Liberty M edia would be liable for damages only if it was a but-for cause of those
    damages. W e have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and affirm.
    I.    B ACKGR OU N D
    A.    The Parties’ R elationship
    The claims in this case arise out of separate, successive agreements whose
    force the parties disputed at trial. The agreements concern the parties’ potential
    acquisition of G erman cable companies.
    In 1999 Deutsche Telekom, which owned the cable infrastructure in
    Germany, planned to split responsibility for this infrastructure among nine new
    regional companies to be auctioned to third parties. Klesch, a private-equity firm,
    bought one regional company in August 2000. Earlier that year it had also
    acquired the exclusive right to negotiate for two other regional companies. To
    solicit funds to invest in these companies, Klesch took steps to form Capital
    Communications Partners (CCP).
    In October 2000 Klesch met with Liberty, which held interests in various
    communications, internet, and video-programming companies, to discuss
    investing in the regional companies; but Liberty did not comm it to any
    investments at that time. Despite some uncertainty about the investors it might be
    able to line up, Klesch bid for the two regional companies in January 2001. By
    -2-
    then it had become aware that Telekom might be willing to sell all six yet-unsold
    regional companies to a single buyer. This possibility appears to have sparked
    Liberty’s interest in the deal. At a m eeting in February 2001 Klesch told Liberty
    that it expected that a 55% interest in the remaining six regional companies would
    be sufficient to exercise control of them. Klesch and Liberty began discussing the
    acquisition of the German companies, and they agreed to explore the possibility
    of jointly acquiring all remaining companies.
    On February 11 Liberty sent an email to Klesch to the effect that the
    law yers should start drafting a written contract. Two days later Liberty sent a
    letter proposing its involvement in CCP, describing anticipated agreements, and
    conditioning future involvement on such things as regulatory approval, financial
    due diligence, and Liberty’s future acceptance of “definitive documentation.”
    Aplee. Supp. App. Vol. IV at 1168.
    On February 16 Klesch and Liberty entered into a confidentiality agreement
    preventing Liberty for two years from using Klesch’s private information to seek
    its own deal with Telekom for the six remaining regional companies. A second
    agreement on February 21 imposed two obligations through June 30, 2001: (1)
    Liberty could not contact Telekom w ithout Klesch’s written permission; and (2)
    neither party could seek without the other a deal concerning the six regional
    companies. In addition, Liberty agreed to notify Klesch if it decided not to
    -3-
    pursue the six companies through CCP, upon which notification the agreement
    would terminate.
    The parties signed a letter of intent the next day, February 22. That letter
    outlined the proposed deal, under which CCP w ould acquire a 55% interest in the
    six regional companies and an option to acquire additional interests. The letter
    stated that there was still no definitive agreement between the parties. Klesch
    soon began to share with Liberty confidential information relating to the deal.
    On M arch 16 the parties signed a document (the Term Sheet) setting forth
    their “understanding of the business arrangement.” Aplt. A pp. Vol. V I at 1705.
    This document set forth the basic terms of the proposed deal, in which Klesch and
    Liberty would become equal partners in CCP, which would be the general partner
    of another entity formed to acquire the German companies. But the acquisition
    was still premised on the condition that all its aspects “will be acceptable to both
    Klesch and Liberty.” 
    Id. at 1706
    .
    The first signs of trouble seem to have come shortly thereafter. Liberty
    asserts that it had signed the Term Sheet based on the assumption that a 55%
    interest w ould provide adequate control of the regional companies. Through its
    own investigations, however, it found that this was not the case under German
    law. Liberty contends that the deal was not worthwhile without a controlling
    interest and that it had determined that it would be necessary to purchase at least
    75% of the equity interest in the regional companies for the level of control it
    -4-
    sought. During negotiations on April 17 such a purchase apparently was not
    acceptable to Telekom. But on April 25 Telekom agreed to sell 75% if Liberty
    agreed to a put that would require it to buy the remaining 25% at the same price
    upon Telekom’s demand. Klesch was later to argue that Liberty unfairly accepted
    this proposal on its own, without consulting Klesch.
    Contending that it had substantially increased its commitment and risk in
    the deal, Liberty sought to change its relationship with Klesch. Klesch consented
    to revise their agreement in M ay 2001. To allay Klesch’s concern about repeated
    revisions, Liberty’s president stated that no further changes in the deal between
    Liberty and Klesch were anticipated absent further changes in the deal with
    Telekom.
    Later in M ay Liberty’s executive committee decided that the deal was
    unfair to Liberty, given that Liberty’s comm itments had risen substantially but
    Klesch’s had not. Liberty’s president notified Klesch that “no transaction . . .
    would be acceptable [to us] w ithout a lower level of guaranteed payments to
    you.” Aplee. Supp. App. Vol. IV at 1179. It wished to characterize payments to
    Klesch as a finder’s fee or as consulting payments, rather than as payments to an
    equity partner, and insisted that Klesch would “not participate in governance.”
    
    Id.
     In a later phone call the parties appear to have been unable to reach an
    agreement, and Liberty insisted that it could not proceed with the deal on the
    -5-
    terms Klesch demanded. W hen Klesch suggested that it might raise further funds
    to support the transaction, Liberty agreed that that might be acceptable.
    Before this phone call Liberty had begun to comm unicate with Telekom
    directly, putatively for the purpose of retaining Telekom’s good will and giving it
    updated information. At trial Liberty’s intent in these discussions was disputed.
    Liberty and Klesch continued their negotiations, and on M ay 17, 2001,
    K lesch appears to have agreed in principle to substantially changed terms. On
    M ay 24 Klesch’s investment banker sent Klesch a letter suggesting that the value
    to Klesch of the M arch 16 terms and the new terms were comparable. Klesch and
    Liberty negotiated and signed a new agreement on June 7. One of the final
    disagreements before the agreement w as signed was whether it w as to be binding.
    Liberty appears initially to have wanted flexibility and not to be bound by the
    new agreement; Klesch wanted the agreement to be binding and advised Liberty
    that it would consider court action if the parties could not reach a binding
    agreement. The final agreement contained a provision requiring good-faith
    negotiations to reach a definitive agreement; if these negotiations did not lead to a
    deal and Liberty were to purchase the six Telekom regional companies by itself
    before June 7, 2003, Liberty promised to pay Klesch 3% of the value of the
    acquired assets, up to 165 million euro. The new agreement explicitly superseded
    the M arch 16 agreement “in its entirety,” Aplt. App. Vol. IV at 1712, but it stated
    -6-
    that nothing else in it was binding except the provision requiring good-faith
    negotiation to reach a definitive agreement.
    The negotiations between Klesch and Liberty called for by the June 7
    agreement did not succeed. On June 21, 2001, Liberty agreed with Telekom on
    terms by which it would acquire the six regional companies directly from
    Telekom. On July 24 Liberty sent a letter to Klesch stating that “Liberty M edia is
    not now, and has never been, a partner with you or your company.” Aplt. App.
    Vol. I at 33. Klesch filed suit on July 27, 2001, contending that Liberty had
    “utterly failed and refused to negotiate with Klesch in good faith” toward a final
    agreement. 
    Id. at 49
    .
    On September 3, 2001, Liberty and Telekom signed an agreement for
    Liberty to acquire the six regional companies. But the German Cartel Office
    quashed the deal on February 28, 2002, and Liberty and Telekom abandoned the
    acquisition shortly thereafter.
    B.     Litigation
    Klesch’s complaint set forth a number of claims under Colorado law :
    breach of contract, promissory estoppel, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, negligent
    misrepresentation, misappropriation of business value, tortious interference with
    economic advantage, and unjust enrichment. The gist of the complaint was that
    Liberty pursued negotiations w ith Telekom in violation of its agreements w ith
    Klesch and unilaterally changed the terms of those agreements. Klesch claimed
    -7-
    that after using Klesch’s unique skills and information related to the deal, Liberty
    seized the opportunity to acquire the six regional companies for itself, thereby
    freezing Klesch out of the deal and failing to treat Klesch as an equal partner
    despite prior agreements and fiduciary duties.
    Liberty’s first amended answer and counterclaim, dated October 23, 2002,
    contended that Klesch’s claims were barred by the terms of the June 7 agreement
    and sought a declaratory judgment that Liberty was relieved of any duties under
    the agreement because Klesch had breached and repudiated it. The counterclaim
    also sought damages for fraud and negligent misrepresentation based on the
    allegation that Klesch falsely stated during the negotiations for the June 7
    agreement that it intended to honor its obligation under that agreement to
    negotiate in good faith.
    The jury rejected Klesch’s claims of breach of fiduciary duty, fraud,
    negligent misrepresentation, tortious interference with economic advantage, and
    misappropriation. It found in favor of Klesch on its claims that Liberty breached
    its contract by contacting Telekom before June 30, 2001, and by negotiating with
    Telekom toward the acquisition of the six regional companies; but it accepted
    Liberty’s affirmative defenses of estoppel, impossibility and frustration, waiver,
    and accord and satisfaction with respect to these claims. The district court later
    rejected Klesch’s equitable claims for promissory estoppel and unjust enrichment.
    II.   ANALYSIS
    -8-
    Klesch’s appeal rests on challenges to three jury instructions: (1) an
    instruction that the jury could not award damages to Klesch under the June 7
    agreement, (2) a misappropriation instruction, and (3) a causation instruction.
    A.     Excluding Damages Under the June 7 Agreement
    Klesch’s first challenge is to the district court’s instruction to the jury that
    Klesch “cannot recover damages under the June 7, 2001 agreement.” Aplt. App.
    Vol. V at 1600. This instruction followed from the court’s ruling on a motion
    Liberty presented under Fed. R. Civ. P. 50 after the close of evidence to preclude
    Klesch from recovering such damages. The court granted the motion on three
    grounds: (1) that Klesch had not pleaded a claim for damages under the June 7
    agreement in either its complaint or the pretrial order; (2) that Klesch had
    presented no evidence that it had suffered damages from breach of the June 7
    agreement; and (3) that Klesch could not both argue that the June 7 agreement
    was invalid and seek damages under that same agreement. W e need not consider
    the latter two grounds because we affirm on the first.
    W e note at the outset that Klesch made no motion at trial to amend its
    complaint or the pretrial order. Its contention is simply that the existing pretrial
    order permitted it to claim damages under the June 7 agreement. W e review the
    district court’s interpretation of the pretrial order for abuse of discretion. See
    Koch v. Koch Indus., Inc., 
    203 F.3d 1202
    , 1219 (10th Cir. 2000) (“This court
    reviews for abuse of discretion a district court’s exclusion of evidence or issues
    -9-
    from trial on the basis of a properly-drawn, detailed pretrial order.”); Tyler v. City
    of M anhattan, 
    118 F.3d 1400
    , 1403 (10th Cir. 1997) (“[T]he district court is in
    the best position to interpret its pretrial order.”).
    W e hold that the district court acted well within its discretion in ruling that
    the pretrial order did not include any claim by Klesch for damages under the
    June 7 agreement. Indeed, Klesch’s consistent position had been that the
    agreement was unenforceable.
    The sole mention in the complaint of the June 7 agreement is in the
    following paragraph:
    In the evening of June 7, 2001, after considerable but futile efforts to
    convince Liberty M edia to act in good faith and to honor its fiduciary
    obligations, [Klesch] signed a “non-binding” term sheet which set
    forth the terms dictated by Liberty M edia (the “June 7 Term Sheet”)
    in an effort to avoid losing all of the benefits of the partnership
    opportunity Klesch had devoted so much effort to acquiring. The
    June 7 Term Sheet, which Klesch signed under threats from Liberty
    M edia, provided that Liberty M edia would negotiate in good faith the
    terms of a final agreement between Klesch and Liberty M edia and,
    failing such agreement, would pay Klesch, upon consummation of the
    Six Regions acquisition, an amount far less than its rightful share.
    Liberty M edia has utterly failed and refused to negotiate with Klesch
    in good faith.
    Aplt. App. Vol. I at 48–49. To be sure, the final sentence might be read to
    suggest that Klesch is claiming damages for breach of the June 7 agreement; but
    the force of the paragraph is to undermine the agreement by asserting that
    Klesch’s consent to it was coerced. This assertion anticipated Liberty’s defense
    that the June 7 agreement freed it from obligations under preceding agreements.
    -10-
    Indeed, Klesch’s reply to Liberty’s counterclaim denied Liberty’s allegation that
    “the June 7 Letter A greement is a valid and enforceable contract between Liberty
    M edia and Klesch & Company, and is binding in accordance with its terms,” id.
    at 82, and its ninth affirmative defense was, “Liberty M edia fraudulently induced
    Klesch to sign the June 7 Term Sheet,” id. at 94.
    In any event, the complaint was superseded by the pretrial order. “[T]he
    pretrial order is the controlling document at trial.” Smith v. Aztec Well Servicing
    Co., 
    462 F.3d 1274
    , 1285 (10th Cir. 2006); see Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e). And the
    pretrial order certainly includes no claim for damages under the June 7
    agreement. In a section entitled “Plaintiff Klesch’s Statement of Claims and
    Defenses,” the order states that Klesch claims that its agreement with Liberty
    entitled it to participate as an “equal partner” rather than “merely an investor” in
    the acquisition of the German companies. Aplt. App. Vol. I at 98. It then
    characterizes the partnership as follow s:
    The partnership and its terms are evidenced in the conduct of the
    parties and in numerous communications and agreements between
    Klesch and Liberty M edia during the winter and early spring of
    2001, including, but not limited to a February 11, 2001 email from
    Liberty M edia president Robert Bennett to M r. Klesch, a February
    21, 2001 confidentiality agreement between Klesch and Liberty
    M edia, a February 22, 2001 letter of intent (“LO I”) among K lesch,
    Liberty M edia and Telekom, and a M arch 16 letter agreement and
    term sheet between Klesch and Liberty M edia.
    
    Id.
     (emphasis added). The list of “communications and agreements” does not
    include the June 7 agreement; and June 7, 2001, is well outside the stated time
    -11-
    period: “the winter and early spring of 2001.” 
    Id.
     Nor is there any mention
    elsewhere in this section of a possible claim by Klesch for damages under the
    June 7 agreement. On the contrary, the sole mention of that agreement is in the
    penultimate sentence, which states: “The June 7 term sheet was the product of
    Liberty M edia’s fraudulent and fiduciary misconduct and therefore Liberty M edia
    has no right to recover any amounts with respect to that misconduct.” Id. at 102.
    As the district court observed in support of its ruling, “[I]f Klesch was taking the
    position that somehow it reserved the right to seek damages under the June 7
    agreement, it would have to somehow affirmatively say that in the final pretrial
    order because in other portions, it’s saying that the June 7 agreement in effect was
    entered under duress.” Aplt. App. Vol. V at 1583.
    Only after the district court asked for supplemental briefing on
    September 8, 2005, about two w eeks into the four-week trial, did Klesch suggest
    that it might have a claim under the June 7 agreement. The court had apparently
    requested “a memorandum and jury instructions clarifying the parties’ positions
    on (I) the June 7 Letter Agreement as a defense for [Liberty] . . . and (ii) the
    interaction of [Klesch’s] defenses to the June 7 Letter Agreement.” Aplee. Supp.
    App. Vol. I at 84–85 (Def.’s Supp. M em. Concerning the June 7 Letter Agreement
    as a Defense, Sept. 13, 2004). Both Liberty and Klesch responded to this request
    on September 10. Klesch’s memorandum reiterated its position that the evidence
    would “permit a jury to conclude that defendants are wrong that the June 7 letter
    -12-
    agreement is a defense to any part of Klesch’s claims.” Id. at 80. But it also
    contained a paragraph suggesting that the jury could conclude that the June 7
    agreement was binding and contained obligations upon Liberty that “provide[d] a
    basis for recovery for Klesch.” Id. at 81. Liberty promptly filed a memorandum
    opposing such a claim for recovery, setting forth the three grounds upon which
    the district court later relied in granting Liberty’s Rule 50 motion to reject the
    claim.
    Strangely, even in closing argument to the jury, Klesch did not claim that
    it was entitled to damages under the June 7 agreement. Thus, it is understandable
    that when Liberty moved under Rule 50 to preclude Klesch from recovering under
    the June 7 agreement, the district court initially expressed surprise, stating that it
    had “absolutely heard nothing, particularly since [hearing Klesch’s] closing, that
    suggests that [Klesch] is seeking damages based on the June 7 agreement.” A plt.
    App. Vol. V at 1575.
    Accordingly, we see no abuse of discretion here. The district court could
    properly have decided that the pretrial order did not include a claim by Klesch for
    damages under the June 7 agreement. Klesch argued in its reply brief in this
    court that Liberty would not have been prejudiced by trying that claim, but that
    was too late to raise this argument. We do not ordinarily consider arguments
    raised for the first time in a reply brief. See United States v. Hall, 
    473 F.3d 1295
    ,
    1301 n.1 (10th Cir. 2007). And we can hardly infer that Liberty would not have
    -13-
    been prejudiced when it has had no occasion to proffer evidence regarding the
    alleged damages from breach of the June 7 agreement.
    Klesch also appears to contend that the district court’s instruction
    prevented the jury from any consideration of the June 7 agreement in assessing
    Klesch’s claims. For instance, it seems to argue that the instruction precluded the
    jury from finding that Liberty had fraudulently induced Klesch to sign the June 7
    agreement. But the court’s instruction was not so broad. It said: “[Klesch]
    cannot recover damages under the June 7, 2001 agreement.” Aplt. App. Vol. V at
    1600. The instruction precluded the jury only from awarding Klesch contractual
    damages under the June 7 agreement. It did not preclude Klesch’s fraud claim or
    reference to the agreement in assessing that claim. W e presume that juries follow
    the court’s instructions as given. See Questar Pipeline Co. v. Grynberg, 
    201 F.3d 1277
    , 1287 (10th Cir. 2000). W e find no error in the instruction.
    B.     M isappropriation
    The district court instructed the jury on Klesch’s misappropriation claim as
    follows: “A misappropriation has occurred when one either w rongfully profits
    from another’s expenditure of labor, skill or money, or capitalizes wrongfully on
    commercial values earned over a period of time.” Aplt. A pp. Vol. V I at 1790.
    Klesch objected at trial and proposed an alternative instruction that did not
    require Liberty to have benefitted from the misappropriation: “A
    misappropriation has occurred if a party uses the business value created by
    -14-
    another to profit itself or if it intentionally exercised dominion or control over an
    opportunity created or obtained by another through the expenditure of the other’s
    own time, labor, skill, or money.” Aplt. A pp. Vol. I at 151.22 (emphasis added).
    Klesch noted that it was seeking an instruction “from conversion cases.” Aplt.
    App. Vol. V at 1386.
    The district court based its instruction on Heller v. Lexton-Ancira Real
    Estate Fund, Ltd., 
    809 P.2d 1016
    , 1021 (Colo. Ct. App. 1990), rev’d on other
    grounds, 
    826 P.2d 819
     (Colo. 1992), which stated, “W e view the tort of ‘unfair
    misappropriation’ as occurring when one either w rongfully profits from another’s
    expenditure of labor, skill or money, or capitalizes wrongfully on comm ercial
    values earned over a period of time.” Klesch attempts to distinguish this case
    from Heller by observing that “Heller involved profits allegedly gained and lost
    through improper competition,” and is therefore not in point. Aplt. Reply Br. at
    30. But Heller addresses “unfair misappropriation” generally. See Heller, 809
    P.2d at 1020–21. The opinion in no way suggests that its description of the tort is
    confined to a particular context. It is irrelevant that the facts in that case are not
    identical to the facts here.
    In contrast, the opinion on which Klesch relies, Solar Systems &
    Peripherals, Inc. v. Burress (In re Burress), 
    245 B.R. 871
     (Bankr. D. Colo. 2000),
    did not attempt in any way to define the tort of unfair misappropriation. The
    issue before the court in Burress was w hether a debt was nondischargeable
    -15-
    because it was incurred as a result of intentional wrongdoing. The court wrote:
    “The facts admitted to by the D ebtor establish that he misappropriated business
    opportunities for his benefit to the detriment of his employer, effectively a
    conversion. W hat must now be determined by this Court, is whether it was done
    with intent to injure the Plaintiff.” 
    Id. at 880
    . But this sentence does not purport
    to state the elements of misappropriation. Instead, it was merely a description of
    the misconduct as an introduction to the analysis of the tortfeasor’s intent. Even
    more clearly inapposite are Klesch’s citations to Restatement (Second) of Torts
    §§ 222A and 227, which discuss the tort of conversion, not misappropriation.
    In essence, what Klesch sought was an instruction on conversion. But
    because its claim was always for misappropriation, not conversion, this argument
    is unavailing. There was no error in the misappropriation instruction.
    C.    Causation
    The theory of damages set forth by Klesch in the pretrial order w as that it
    was entitled to the value of the opportunity that Liberty had wrongfully
    expropriated when it pursued alone the acquisition of the German cable
    companies. The pretrial order stated that Klesch would base its claim for
    damages on the value of its opportunity at the time of the expropriation. In
    closing argument Klesch alleged that the expropriation occurred in M ay or June
    2001.
    -16-
    At trial Klesch’s expert testified to the price “a willing buyer would pay a
    willing seller” for the right to Klesch’s share of the future Telekom deal as of
    M ay 2001. Aplt. App. Vol. III at 931. The expert did not adjust his calculations
    for the possibility that the deal might not conclude; instead, he stated that he had
    assumed that the deal would be consummated and that the jury needed “to
    recognize and to make an adjustment for the reality which is that as of M ay 2001,
    nobody knew for sure whether the deal would have gone through.” Id. Thus,
    Klesch’s computation of damages w ould not be affected by whether the deal with
    Telekom w as ultimately approved by the German Cartel Office. Instead, the
    possibility of the Cartel Office’s disapproving the acquisition would have been
    factored into the assessment in M ay 2001 of the value of Klesch’s interest.
    Klesch nevertheless complains that the jury instruction on causation
    required the jury to deny recovery on the ground that the deal later fell through.
    The challenged instruction was as follow s:
    The word “cause” as used in these instructions means an act or
    failure to act that in natural and probable sequence produced the
    claimed injury. It is a cause without which the claimed injury would
    not have happened.
    If more than one act or failure to act contributed to the claimed
    injury, then each act or failure to act may have been a cause of the
    injury. A cause does not have to be the only cause or the last or
    nearest cause. It is enough if the act or failure to act joins in a
    natural and probable w ay with some other act or failure to act to
    cause some or all of the claimed injury. Thus, if the defendant’s act
    or failure to act substantially contributes to an injury, it is a cause of
    that injury, even though other factors, including factors beyond the
    defendant’s control, may also have contributed to the claimed injury.
    -17-
    The defendants’ conduct is not a substantial contributing cause in
    bringing about harm to the plaintiff if the harm would have been
    sustained even if the defendant had not committed the wrongful act.
    The plaintiff must prove that the defendant’s conduct is a substantial
    contributing cause of the injury.
    One’s conduct is not a cause of another’s injuries, however, if
    in order to bring about such injuries, it was necessary that his or her
    conduct combine or join an intervening cause that also contributed to
    cause the injuries. An intervening cause is a cause that would not
    have been reasonably foreseen by a reasonably careful person under
    the same or similar circumstances.
    Aplt. App. Vol. VI at 1795 (emphasis added).
    Klesch takes issue with the instruction’s statement that “[t]he defendants’
    conduct is not a substantial contributing cause in bringing about harm to the
    plaintiff if the harm would have been sustained even if the defendant had not
    comm itted the wrongful act.” Id. This is a straightforward statement of but-for
    causation. Klesch argues, however, that under Colorado law, “conduct can be a
    substantial cause even where the harm would have happened anyway if the
    defendant’s actions as well as the other causal forces would have each been
    sufficient to bring about the harm.” A plt. Br. at 35. It points to a classic example
    from tort law: when a negligently caused fire and a lightning-caused fire combine
    and burn down a house, both are causes of damage to the house and the tortfeasor
    who started one of the fires is liable, even if either fire would have been sufficient
    to cause the same damage. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 432 cmt. d, illus.
    4.
    -18-
    W e understand Klesch to analogize the two fires to two causes of harm in
    this case: (1) Liberty’s expropriation of Klesch’s opportunity for the deal with
    Telekom, and (2) the German Cartel Office’s rejection of that deal. Klesch seems
    to be suggesting that the causation instruction improperly told the jury to deny
    recovery for the expropriation if the Cartel Office’s rejection meant that Klesch
    would have gained nothing anyway. Perhaps this argument would have made
    sense if Klesch had been seeking damages equal to what it would have gained had
    the deal gone through. But that was not what Klesch sought. The argument is
    inconsistent with Klesch’s damages theory, which was the theory conveyed by the
    court’s unchallenged instructions to the jury on damages. In particular, the jury
    was told that events after Liberty’s misconduct were irrelevant. Instruction No.
    58 said:
    Any damages suffered by Klesch & Company became fixed at
    the time of Liberty M edia’s wrongful conduct. If you find for Klesch
    & Company on any of its claims, you must determine the amount of
    damages suffered by Klesch & Company as of the time of the breach
    or other misconduct. Events taking place subsequent to the time of
    the breach are not generally relevant to the calculation of dam ages.
    Aplt. App. Vol. VI at 1794 (emphasis added). The jury was similarly instructed
    that “Loss of [Klesch’s] property or assets caused by [Liberty’s] misconduct . . .
    are determined by the fair market value of the asset at the time of the loss. The
    fair market value is the price at which the property or asset would change hands
    betw een a willing buyer and a willing seller.” Instruction No. 57, id. at 1793.
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    Klesch’s damages were thereby fixed as of M ay (or possibly June) 2001.
    The Cartel Office’s rejection of the deal would have no effect on the damages
    calculation. That rejection occurred well after June 2001, and the fact of the
    rejection could not change the probability as of M ay or June 2001 of the deal’s
    rejection. Accordingly, the jury, if it complied w ith the court’s instructions,
    could not have denied Klesch recovery based on the action of the Cartel O ffice.
    (No one has contended, or could contend, that the rejection was certain at the time
    of the alleged expropriation.) Although the causation instruction may have been
    flawed (we need not decide the issue), we are confident that the flaw alleged by
    Klesch could not have affected the verdict.
    III.   C ON CLU SIO N
    The district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED.
    ENTERED FOR THE COURT
    Harris L Hartz
    Circuit Judge
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