Court Opinion

ID: 159203
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-08-14 06:19:47+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:04.970681
License: Public Domain

203 F.3d 1202 (10th Cir. 2000)
WILLIAM I. KOCH; OXBOW  ENERGY, INC.; L. B. SIMMONS  ENERGY, INC., doing business as  Rocket Oil Company; SPRING  CREEK ART FOUNDATION INC.;  GAY A. ROANE; ANN ALSPAUGH;  THE NORTHERN TRUST  COMPANY, as trustee; PAUL  ANTHONY ANDRES COX; HOLLY  A.A.C. FARABEE; RONALD W.  BORDERS; FREDERICK R. KOCH;  THE FIDUCIARY TRUST  COMPANY INTERNATIONAL,  Plaintiffs-Appellants,andUNITED STATES TRUST  COMPANY OF NEW YORK, as  trustee; MARJORIE SIMMONS  GRAY, as trustee; MARJORIE L.  SIMMONS, as trustee;  NATIONSBANK N.A., co-trustee of  the Louis Howard Andres Cox Trusts  B & D,  Plaintiffs,v.KOCH INDUSTRIES, INC.;  CHARLES G. KOCH; STERLING V.  VARNER; DAVID H. KOCH;  DONALD L. CORDES; THOMAS M.  CAREY,  Defendants-Appellees.
No. 98-3223
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS TENTH CIRCUIT
February 14, 2000

Appeal from the United States District Court  for the District of Kansas. D.C. No. 85-1636[Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted][Copyrighted Material Omitted]
Arthur R. Miller, Cambridge, Massachusetts, (Fred H. Bartlit, Jr., Donald E.  Scott, Ellen A. Cirangle, Ryan D. Downs, Glen E. Summers, of Bartlit, Beck,  Herman, Palenchar & Scott, Denver, Colorado, Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Appellants William  I. Koch, Oxbow Energy, Inc., Northern Trust Company and  Spring Creek Art Foundation; Harry L. Najim, of Najim Law Offices, Wichita,  Kansas; Russell E. Brooks, Eugene F. Farabaugh, of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley &  McCloy, New York, New York, Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Appellants Frederick R.  Koch and The Fiduciary Trust Company International; Gregory S. C. Huffman, L.  James Berglund, II, Christopher L. Barnes, of Thompson & Knight, P.C., Dallas,  Texas, Attorneys for Plaintiffs-Appellants L. B. Simmons Energy, Inc. d/b/a  Rocket Oil Company, Gay A. Roane, Ann Alspaugh, Paul Cox, Holly Farabee  and Ronald Borders, with him on the briefs).
Robert L. Howard, of Foulston & Siefkin L.L.P., Wichita, Kansas (James M.  Armstrong, James D. Oliver, and Timothy B. Mustaine with him on the briefs)  for Appellees.
Before EBEL , McWILLIAMS , and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

I.  INTRODUCTION

1
In June of 1983, a group of Koch Industries, Inc. ("KII") stockholders  entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement ("SPA") with KII.  Under the SPA, the  selling stockholders (the "Plaintiffs"), who owned 47.8% of KII stock, received  $200 per share, a total value of approximately $1.1 billion.  Two years later, the  Plaintiffs sued KII and individual KII officers (the "Defendants"), claiming the  Defendants misrepresented and omitted material facts during the negotiation of  the SPA, which resulted in the Plaintiffs' undervaluation of KII stock.  Thirteen  years later, the case finally went to trial.  Following an eleven week trial, a jury  returned a verdict in favor of the Defendants.  The Plaintiffs now appeal a host of  district court rulings, made both prior to and during trial.

2
Specifically, the Plaintiffs challenge the district court's summary judgment  ruling; its construction, application, and unwillingness to vary the terms of the  pretrial order; various evidentiary rulings; jury instructions on state law claims;  the district court's restrictions on the Plaintiffs' fraud claims; its limitation of  damages; and, generally the trial court's administration of this litigation.  With  the exception of the district court's jury instructions on two fraud claims  premised on Texas state law, this court affirms the judgment of the district  court.

II.  BACKGROUND
A.  Factual Background

3
The subject of this dispute, KII, is the second largest privately-held  corporation in the United States.  Based in Wichita, Kansas, KII owns an array of  energy-related operations in the United States and Canada.  Specifically, KII's  assets include oil refineries, service stations, pipelines, coal mines, oil and gas  exploration properties and processing plants, and a fleet of trucks.  KII also owns  numerous ranches and several hundred Chrysler dealerships.

4
Originally named the Rock Island Oil and Refining Company, KII was  founded by Fred C. Koch, the father of plaintiffs William and Frederick Koch  and defendants Charles and David Koch.  Fred Koch launched the company after  World War II, when his mentor, L.B. Simmons, sold a refinery and several  pipelines to Fred.  In exchange, L.B. Simmons received stock and cash and he  soon purchased additional shares of Rock Island Oil and Refining.

5
L.B. Simmons' stock eventually passed individually and in trust to the  following plaintiffs: Gay Roane, Holly Farabee, and Ronald Borders (the "Texas  Plaintiffs"), Ann Alspaugh, Paul Cox, and L.B. Simmons Energy, Inc.  (collectively, the "Simmons Family"1).  For  decades, the Simmons Family elected  a director to KII's Board of Directors.  Those members of the Simmons family  involved in the instant suit are cousins to the four Koch brothers.

6
In 1966 and 1967, Fred Koch gave all his common shares of KII stock to  trusts created for his four sons, granting equal shares to plaintiff William and  defendants Charles and David, but a lesser amount to plaintiff Frederick.  When  Fred Koch died in 1967, Charles succeeded his father as a director and chief  executive officer of KII, positions he retains today.  David went to work for KII  in 1970 and presently serves as an executive vice-president and a director. William joined KII full-time in 1974, becoming vice president of corporate  development five years later and continuously serving as a director from 1967 to  1983. Frederick, however, displayed substantially less interest in the company; he  was never a KII employee and did not place a representative on the board until  March of 1981.

7
In 1980, a dispute erupted over the management of KII, pitting William,  Frederick and the Simmons Family against Charles and David.  During this  contentious power struggle, Charles and David purchased the 4 % of KII stock  owned by Howard Marshall III, the son of director J. Howard Marshall II.  As a  result, the voting percentage of stock retained by William, Frederick and the  Simmons Family stood at 47.8 %, while Charles, David and the family of J.  Howard Marshall II controlled 49.7 %, with employees and others owning the  balance.  In addition, the Board voted to terminate William's employment at KII.

8
At that point, KII began negotiating with William, Frederick and the  Simmons Family either to buy back some or all of their stock or to take KII  public and have the now dissident shareholders sell their stock on the public  market.  Both sides then retained law firms and investment banking companies to  represent them in the negotiations.  On behalf of the dissident shareholders, the  investment banking firm Goldman Sachs undertook an extensive valuation study  of KII, beginning in the spring of 1982.

9
These efforts culminated in the June 1983 SPA.  Signed by all parties on  June 4, 1983, the SPA provided that William, Frederick and the Simmons Family  would sell their shares of KII common stock back to the company for $200 per  share.  In addition, the selling shareholders received their pro rata interests in an  offshore oil concession.  The SPA contained two relevant warranties by KII: The  first provided that all KII financial statements disclosed to the selling  shareholders had fairly presented KII's financial condition and were prepared in  accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.  The second warranty  promised that since December 31, 1982, the Defendants had provided all  information "which if fully disclosed might materially affect the valuation of  [KII] stock . . . ."

B.  Procedural Background

10
In June of 1985, two years after signing the SPA, the selling shareholders  filed suit, claiming the Defendants had misrepresented or failed to disclose  material facts which, if properly provided, would have increased the Plaintiffs'  valuation of KII stock at the time of the SPA.  Specifically, the complaint  detailed three alleged misrepresentations concerning KII's oil and gas properties  in the Persian Gulf, Utah, and North Dakota and further alleged a general scheme  to conceal the true value of KII stock.  The Plaintiffs asserted federal claims  under sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and  Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 10b-5, and state claims for breach of  fiduciary duty, breach of warranty, and fraud.  They requested actual damages of  over $2 billion.  The Defendants named in the action were KII; Charles and  David Koch; Sterling Varner, the president and a director of KII; Tom Carey,  KII's vice president of finance; and Donald Cordes, KII's vice president of legal  affairs.

11
On November 5, 1986, the district court granted summary judgment in  favor of the Defendants on the Persian Gulf and Utah claims, but denied  summary judgment on the North Dakota claim.  The district court also determined  the Plaintiffs' allegation of a general scheme to conceal the value of stock failed  to meet the particularity requirement of Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil  Procedure.  After several failed attempts to bring the excluded claims before  other fora,2 in 1989 the Plaintiffs persuaded  the district court to grant them leave  to amend their complaint, adding both general and specific allegations of  fraudulent accounting policies and practices.  Based on this amended complaint,  the Plaintiffs then sought broad discovery from several non-parties, requests  which a magistrate judge and the district court strictly limited.

12
In 1993, the district court closed discovery.  The Defendants then filed a  motion for summary judgment on all of the remaining claims.  On July 11, 1997,  the district court issued its order, granting summary judgment to the Defendants  on several of the Plaintiffs' claims.  The district court, however, denied summary  judgment on one of the Plaintiffs' accounting claims, which alleged the  Defendants failed to disclose that certain expenses were "unusual or infrequently  occurring."  In addition, the district court preserved the Plaintiffs' claims that the  Defendants withheld information about two expansions of KII's Pine Bend  Refinery in Minnesota.  Just prior to trial the district court further ruled that  Texas law governed the Texas Plaintiffs' state law fraud claims.

13
In 1998, an eleven week jury trial proceeded on the accounting and Pine  Bend claims.  The jury eventually returned a verdict in favor of the Defendants. With respect to the Pine Bend claims, the jury found that the Defendants had  withheld information but that their misrepresentations or omissions were not  material.  It also found the Defendants had not breached their fiduciary duty,  because they disclosed all material facts and KII had paid a fair price for the  stock.  On the accounting claim, the jury found the expenses at issue were not  infrequently occurring as defined by generally accepted accounting principles.

14
The Plaintiffs, including the Texas Plaintiffs, now challenge a litany of  district court rulings issued both before and during the trial.  This court exercises  jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirms in part and reverses in  part.

III.  DISCUSSION
A. Pine Bend Claims

15
The Plaintiffs challenge two district court rulings relating to their claims  that, prior to the SPA, the Defendants withheld information about expansion  plans for KII's Pine Bend Refinery.  First, the Plaintiffs argue the district court  improperly granted summary judgment against the Plaintiffs on their claim that  the Defendants did not disclose KII's plans to expand the refinery to a crude  processing capacity of 175,000 barrels per day ("B/D").  Second, the Plaintiffs  assert the district court erred by denying their motion to amend the Pretrial Order  to conform to evidence at trial indicating that just prior to the SPA, KII had plans  to increase the refinery's capacity to 200,000 B/D.

16
1.  Summary Judgment on the 175,000 B/D Claim

17
In a 1993 Pretrial Order,3 the  Plaintiffs asserted the following claim:

18
As of the date of the stock sale, defendants knew but did not  inform the selling shareholders that KII already was increasing, and making plans for further increasing, the crude processing capacity of  the Pine Bend Refinery to approximately 145,000 B/D by June 1983; to approximately 155,000 B/D by the end of 1983; and to approximately 175,000 B/D within the next two years thereafter.

19
. . . Defendants' plans included delivering and selling the increased  Pine Bend output into existing and new market territories to be  accessed more effectively by the reversal of the direction of flow of  the Williams Pipeline and by other means.

20
1993 Pretrial Order, 9-10 (italics added) (underline in original).  The Plaintiffs  sought to recover for these alleged omissions under the following legal theories:  (1) breach of contractual warranty; (2) breach of fiduciary duty; (3) common law  fraud; and (4) securities fraud.  See id. at 16.

21
The Defendants moved for summary judgment on each of the 145,000,  155,000, and 175,000 B/D claims.  The district court denied summary judgment  on the 145,000 and 155,000 B/D claims, allowing those claims to go to trial, but  granted the Defendants' motion on the 175,000 B/D claim.

22
In its summary judgment order, the district court first posed the issue in  these terms: "Is there enough evidence from which a reasonable jury could find  that as of June of 1983 KII had firm plans to expand Pine Bend's capacity to  175,000 bpd within two years?"  Summary Judgment Memorandum and Order,  July 11, 1997, at 127-28 (emphasis added).  In answering this question, the  district court went on to rule,

23
The court believes a reasonable jury could not find that the  defendants in June of 1983 had reasonably firm or definite plans to  expand Pine Bend's capacity to 175,000 bpd within two years.  At  most, the evidence sustains the inference that [KII] officials believed  in early 1983 that the economic forecasts and other projections were  sufficiently favorable that they should reconsider now increasing  refinery capacity under two previously defined cases. . . . The  plaintiffs do not submit any evidence from which one can reasonably  infer that as of the SPA the defendants had already decided on a  specific schedule for expanding refinery capacity regardless of [the  engineering firm] Litwin's engineering results and cost summaries. Instead, the evidence overwhelmingly indicates that the defendants  remained uncertain about the timing, amount and type of any  expansion and that any decision to expand remained contingent on  among other things, Litwin's results.  The mere decision to consider  refinery expansion and to set parameters for estimating costs is not  what the plaintiffs allege in this claim.  They allege that the  defendants planned to expand the refinery to 175,000 bpd within two  years.  Quite simply, the plaintiffs do not come forth with the  evidence to sustain this allegation of "planned" expansion.

24
Id. at 128-29 (emphasis added).

25
The Plaintiffs appeal this decision on two grounds.  First, the Plaintiffs  contend the district court erroneously required evidence of "firm" or "definite"  plans, even though neither the Plaintiffs' claim in the Pretrial Order nor the  controlling law on any of their legal theories uses those terms.  Second, the  Plaintiffs assert that a reasonable jury could find that the evidence supported the  exact claim articulated in the Pretrial Order, i.e., KII was "making plans" for a  175,000 B/D expansion.

26
This court reviews a district court's grant of summary judgment de novo. See Anderson v. Coors Brewing Co., 181 F.3d 1171, 1175 (10th Cir.  1999). Summary judgment is appropriate "if the pleadings, depositions, answers to  interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show  that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is  entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).  "When  applying this standard, we view the evidence and draw reasonable inferences  therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party."  Simms v.  Oklahoma ex rel. Dep't of Mental Health & Substance Abuse Servs., 165 F.3d  1321, 1326 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 120 S.Ct. 53 (1999).  This court has held  that failure of proof of an essential element renders all other facts immaterial. See Treff v. Galetka, 74 F.3d 191, 195 (10th Cir. 1996).  Thus, to succeed on  summary judgment on the 175,000 B/D claim, the Defendants must demonstrate  that no material facts regarding this claim, or at least regarding any essential  element of the claim, are in dispute and that these undisputed facts fail to prove  as a matter of law any essential element of the claim.

27
In Air-Exec Inc. v. Two Jacks Inc., this court noted that when parties to a  lawsuit fail to object to or move to amend a pretrial order, that order "measures  the dimensions of the lawsuit both in the trial court and on appeal."  584 F.2d  942, 944 (10th Cir. 1978); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e) (the pretrial order "shall  control the subsequent course of the action unless modified by a subsequent  order").  For purposes of summary judgment, therefore, the pretrial order coupled  with the governing law establish the quantum of evidence required for the  Plaintiffs to survive the Defendants' summary judgment motion on the 175,000  B/D claim.

28
In the 1993 Pretrial Order, the Plaintiffs asserted KII was "making plans"  to expand the refinery's crude capacity to 175,000 B/D by the end of 1985.  As  this order plots the dimensions of the Plaintiffs' claim, they must reference  sufficient record evidence for this court to conclude a reasonable jury could find  KII was "making plans" for this 175,000 B/D expansion by the end of 1985. Additionally, although each of the Plaintiffs' four legal theories impose upon the  Defendants slightly different disclosure standards,4 this court can look to the least  burdensome of these standards to determine whether any of the claims should  have gone to trial.  Among these four slightly different disclosure standards, the  least rigorous for the Plaintiffs is that flowing from their breach of warranty  claim.  Thus, in order for even the warranty claim to survive summary judgment,  this court, viewing the evidence before the district court at summary judgment in  a light most favorable to the Plaintiffs, must answer the following three questions  in the affirmative.  (1) Could a reasonable jury find that at the time of the SPA,  KII was making plans to expand Pine Bend's crude refining capacity to 175,000  B/D by the end of 1985?  (2) If so, did KII withhold this information from the  Plaintiffs prior to the SPA?  (3) Might knowledge of this information materially  affect the valuation of KII stock by a prudent and knowledgeable investor?

29
Without needing to address the last two of these three inquires, this court  concludes that a reasonable jury could not have found KII was making plans for a  175,000 B/D expansion at the time of the SPA.  In reaching this determination,  we have reviewed all of the record evidence which might support the Plaintiffs'  claim, though this court is not obligated to locate or inspect materials not  referenced by the parties in their briefs.5  See Adler v. Wal-Mart Stores, 144 F.3d  664, 672 (10th Cir. 1998); see also Gamble, Simmons & Co. v. Kerr-McGee  Corp., 175 F.3d 762, 773 n.5 (10th Cir. 1999) ("In the absence of sufficient  citation to record support for a party's allegations, we decline to search for the  proverbial needle in a haystack.").

30
The crux of the Plaintiffs' 175,000 B/D expansion claim is this: as far as  the Plaintiffs knew, at the time of the SPA the Pine Bend Refinery utilized two  crude units, No. 1 having a capacity of approximately 40,000 B/D and No. 2  having a capacity of approximately 90,000 B/D, for a total capacity of  approximately 130,000 B/D.  Unbeknownst to the Plaintiffs, however, KII was in  the process of revamping unit No. 2 to a capacity of 110,000 B/D, while also  working with Litwin Engineering ("Litwin") either to expand No. 1 to a 65,000  B/D capacity or to replace No. 1 with a new unit with a 65,000 B/D capacity. The Litwin project, combined with the revamp of unit No. 2, would allegedly  result in a total capacity of 175,00 B/D, all of which information the Plaintiffs  claim the Defendants hid from them prior to the SPA.

31
In opposing summary judgment on the 175,000 B/D claim, the Plaintiffs  also rely heavily upon evidence that KII had struck a deal with the Williams  Pipeline Company to reverse the flow of the Williams pipeline, but failed to  inform the Plaintiffs of that agreement.  The Plaintiffs maintain that the Williams  reversal provided KII access to new markets for gasoline, thus indicating a plan  to increase crude production capacity to 175,000 B/D.  Evidence of general  market expansion, however, does not specifically support the Plaintiffs' discrete  claims for crude production expansion to 145,000; 155,000; 175,000; or 200,000  B/D.  Indeed, to succeed on each of these claims, the Plaintiffs must direct this  court to evidence of distinct plans to expand production capacity to each  specifically alleged number of barrels per day, independent of evidence  demonstrating efforts to expand general markets.  When the Plaintiffs' stated  claims so discretely reference 145,000 B/D, 155,000 B/D, and 175,000 B/D and  further include anticipated dates of accomplishment for each expansion, they  must provide evidence differentiating between the three claims.  With respect to  the 175,000 B/D claim, therefore, the Plaintiffs need to demonstrate evidence of  the alleged plan through Litwin to expand Pine Bend's crude production capacity  to 175,000 B/D.6

32
Viewing the relevant evidence in a light most favorable to the Plaintiffs,  this court concludes that a reasonable jury could not find that prior to the SPA  KII was making plans to expand Pine Bend's crude production to 175,000 B/D. At most, KII was merely contemplating this expansion possibility.  Although the  evidence does not reveal definitively whether KII ever contracted with Litwin to  conduct design and cost studies for this possible expansion, this court concludes  that a reasonable jury could infer such a contract existed and even that Litwin  performed this work.  What a reasonable jury could not find, however, is that  KII's contracting with Litwin to perform preliminary design and cost studies rises  to the level of KII's making plans for this expansion.  According to Merriam-Webster's  Collegiate Dictionary, "to make plans" is synonymous with "to plan,"  which is defined as "to devise or project the realization or achievement of." Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (10th ed., 1993) (emphasis added). "To study," however, merely means "to consider attentively or in detail." Id. (emphasis added).  Resort to dictionaries thus confirms that which common  parlance indicates: "studying" is not "planning," and, in this case, the term  "making plans" connotes a higher level of commitment to the expansion than  mere evidence of initial cost and design studies indicate.

33
Moreover, the totality of the remainder of the evidence provides an even  stronger sense that KII's approach to this potential 175,000 B/D expansion was  rather tentative, at least at the time of the SPA.  In November of 1983, five  months after the SPA, KII announced plans for a more aggressive expansion to  over 200,000 B/D, a plan predicated on an entirely different technical approach  than the ones studied by Litwin to effectuate the 175,000 B/D expansion.  This  approximately 200,000 B/D expansion envisioned adding a third crude  processing unit, as opposed to the options studied by Litwin of either replacing  or upgrading existing unit No. 1.  Despite the 200,000 B/D expansion  announcement, one month later KII was still merely considering the lesser,  intermediate step of expanding to 175,000 B/D, as evidenced by an  announcement at the December 1983 Board of Directors Meeting that KII was  continuing to analyze the technical and economic feasibility of the 175,000 B/D  expansion options studied by Litwin. It was only in February 1984, eight months  after the SPA, that KII apparently committed in any way to an approximately  175,000 B/D expansion.7  In sum, the  evidence before the district court at  summary judgment, viewed in a light most favorable to the Plaintiffs, shows at  most that KII was considering an expansion to 175,000 B/D when the parties  signed the SPA, but it does not demonstrate that KII was actually making plans  for this expansion, as the Plaintiffs alleged in the Pretrial Order.  Thus, this court  affirms the district court's grant of summary judgment for the Defendants on the  175,000 B/D expansion claim.

34
Alternatively, the evidence in no way establishes KII had firm plans for a  175,000 B/D expansion at the time of the SPA and, although the district court  erred in requiring evidence of such firm plans, the Plaintiffs invited this error and  thus cannot appeal it.  This court has long recognized the equitable doctrine of  invited error.  See United States v. Johnson, 183 F.3d 1175, 1179 n.2 (10th Cir.  1999); Air Exec., 584 F.2d at 944.  "The Invited Error doctrine prevents a party  from inducing action by a court and later seeking reversal on the ground that the  requested action was error."  Johnson, 183 F.3d at 1178-79 n.2.

35
Here, the Plaintiffs induced the district court at the summary judgment  stage to view their claim as asserting KII had made "firm plans" for a 175,000  B/D expansion.  Both the Plaintiffs' expert witness, in his report, and their Brief  in Opposition to the Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment stated KII had  "firm plans" for this expansion in June of 1983.  One important purpose of  written briefs and expert opinion evidence is to focus the court's attention on the  specific nature of the legal theories and factual allegations at issue in a case.  By  claiming these "firm plans," the Plaintiffs themselves induced the district court to  focus on whether KII had made such firm plans.  Cf. Air Exec., 584 F.2d at 944  (holding defendants could not appeal an inferential admission they had made in  the Pretrial Order, as the Pretrial Order "measures the dimensions of the  lawsuit").

36
This court acknowledges that it is the Pretrial Order which measures the  dimensions of a lawsuit, and not a summary judgment brief or an expert's  testimony, and therefore the district court erred in requiring evidence of "firm  plans" rather than "making plans."  Nonetheless, the Plaintiffs induced the  district court into making this error, and thus they cannot challenge this  heightened evidentiary requirement on appeal.  Because the evidence before the  district court on summary judgment, viewed in a light most favorable to the  Plaintiffs, provides no indication whatsoever that KII had made firm plans to  expand Pine Bend to 175,000 B/D at the time of the SPA, this court affirms the  district court's grant of summary judgment.

37
2.  The Motion to Amend the Pretrial Order to Add a 200,000 B/D           Expansion Claim

38
At the close of their case, the Plaintiffs moved to amend the Pretrial Order  to conform to the evidence, asserting the Defendants had impliedly consented to  the trial of a new claim: that the Defendants failed to disclose KII's pre-SPA plan  to expand Pine Bend's capacity to 200,000 B/D.  The district court denied that  motion for several reasons.  First, it resolved that the evidence at trial presented  no new issues at all, but instead was the same evidence the Defendants presented  at summary judgment to show the Plaintiffs always knew about KII's ideas for  expansion.  The district court thus concluded the Defendants did not consent to  the trial of a new claim.  Second, the district court reasoned that because the  subject evidence was also relevant to the claims already being tried, the Plaintiffs  could not rely on that evidence to amend the Pretrial Order in conformity with the  evidence.  Third, the district court determined its reasoning for granting the  Defendants summary judgment on the 175,000 B/D claim applied with equal  force to any possible 200,000 B/D claim.  Finally, the district court concluded  that forcing the Defendants to defend this new claim would unfairly disadvantage  them.  This court reviews the district court's denial of the motion to amend for an  abuse of discretion.  See Trierweiler v. Croxton & Trench Holding  Corp, 90 F.3d  1523, 1543 (10th Cir. 1996).

39
During defense counsel's cross-examination of  William H. Hanna, the  President of KII at the time of trial, Hanna stated the following:

40
We really wanted very badly to do this, to be able to reverse [the  Williams] pipeline, because we could see   as you've heard earlier,  starting in '76 there was more product, more product, more product. We weren't naive.  We knew we were heading to 200,000 barrels a  day so we were looking for every outlet.

41
Later in the trial, the following exchange occurred between defendant David  Koch and Plaintiffs' counsel during their direct examination:

42
Q: Did you know in the fall of 1982 that the Pine Bend Refinery was  heading to 200,000 barrels a day?

43
A: Yes, Bernie Paulson had been talking about expanding the  refinery to that number for many years.

44
Q: This was the   Paulson starting talking about this

45
A: Yeah, in the 1970[s].

46
Q:   in the 1970[s]. '70s.  He'd advocated 200,000.  Right?

47
A: Well, it was a long-term objective, yes.

48
. . .

49
Q: That you, David Koch, then did know in the fall of 1982 that the  company was heading to 200,000 barrels a day?

50
A: Yes, at some distant point in the future.  I mean, we were trying  to get there eventually.

51
. . .

52
A: The 200,000 barrels a day was in the future.  Now, I don't think  we had any idea of   during the early 80s at what point we were  going to reach 200,000 barrels a day, but it was almost certain that  sooner or later we were going to get there.

53
In addition, Plaintiffs' counsel questioned both Bernard Paulson and William  Koch about this alleged 1982 plan for expansion to 200,000 B/D.

54
The Plaintiffs contend that by eliciting Hanna's testimony and failing to  object to the other testimony, the Defendants impliedly consented to the trial of a  new claim, i.e., that the Defendants failed to disclose to the Plaintiffs KII's  200,000 B/D expansion plan.  Because of this implied consent, the Plaintiffs  argue, the district court erred by denying them leave to amend the pretrial order  to include this additional claim.

55
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(b) provides:

56
When issues not raised by the pleadings are tried by express or  implied consent of the parties, they shall be treated in all respects as  if they had been raised in the pleadings.  Such amendment of the  pleadings as may be necessary to cause them to conform to the  evidence and to raise these issues may be made upon motion of any  party at any time, even after judgment . . . .

57
Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b).  A party impliedly consents to the trial of an issue not  contained within the pleadings either by introducing evidence on the new issue or  by failing to object when the opposing party introduces such evidence.  See  Hardin v. Manitowoc-Forsythe Corp., 691 F.2d 449, 457 (10th Cir. 1982).

58
Contrary to the Plaintiffs' characterization of Hanna's and David Koch's  testimony, the Defendants neither introduced evidence on a new issue nor failed  to object to that type of evidence.  Indeed, this testimony presented anything but  a new issue.  Both before and during the course of this litigation, the Plaintiffs  were fully aware that beginning in 1977, KII President Bernard Paulson had  lobbied to expand Pine Bend to a capacity of 200,000 B/D.  The Defendants  presented evidence at summary judgment demonstrating the Plaintiffs possessed  knowledge of Paulson's aspiration to expand Pine Bend's capacity to 200,00  B/D.  See 6A Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice &  Procedure § 1527, at 287-89 (1990) ("[I]f the evidence or issue was within the  knowledge of the party seeking modification [of the pretrial order] at the time of  the [pretrial conference] . . . then it may not be allowed.")  Moreover, in both the  1993 and 1998 Pretrial Orders, the Defendants attempted to refute the Plaintiffs'  non-disclosure claim by contending that the Plaintiffs were aware of KII's  engagement in a process for expansion.  Thus, this longstanding objective to  expand Pine Bend to a 200,000 B/D capacity was both known by the Plaintiffs  and raised in the pleadings.

59
The Plaintiffs now argue that prior to the early 1980's, KII had abandoned  Paulson's idea for expansion, and therefore, the trial testimony pointed to some  new 200,000 B/D expansion plan first proposed in 1982 and about which the  Defendants were not informed.  The only fair, contextual reading of the  testimony, however, does not support the Plaintiffs' interpretation.  Both Hanna  and David Koch unequivocally stated that this 1982 200,000 B/D expansion  objective had originated with Paulson back in 1976.  Therefore, the district court  did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the Defendants had not consented  to the trial of an issue not raised in the pleadings.

60
In addition, Hanna's and David Koch's testimony about the 200,000 B/D  expansion plan was relevant to issues already being tried.  "When the evidence  claimed to show that an issue was tried by consent is relevant to an issue already  in the case, and there is no indication that the party presenting the evidence  intended thereby to raise a new issue, amendment may be denied in the discretion  of the trial court."  Hardin, 691 F.2d at 457; see also Dole v. Mr. W Fireworks,  Inc., 889 F.2d 543, 547 (5th Cir. 1989) ("The evidence that [plaintiff] alleges to  have shown implied consent was also relevant to the other issues at trial and  cannot be used to imply consent to try the present issue." (emphasis in original)). The Plaintiffs' awareness of all KII's ideas for expanding Pine Bend was relevant  to whether the Plaintiffs were unaware of the purported 145,000 and 155,000  B/D expansions, claims that were being tried.  Undoubtedly, that is why defense  counsel elicited this testimony, not because the Defendants intended to raise a  new issue.  The Defendants were merely attempting to demonstrate that KII  embraced a healthy corporate philosophy to act aggressively, move ahead, and  increase market share, a philosophy of which the Plaintiffs were aware.  The  evidence regarding the 200,000 B/D expansion goal was introduced simply to  illustrate the Plaintiffs' knowledge of that philosophy and thus of the two lesser  expansions, not to inject evidence of a specific or discrete plan, as argued by the  Plaintiffs.  The district court, therefore, did not abuse its discretion in denying  the Plaintiffs' motion to amend the Pretrial Order.

61
Alternatively, the Plaintiffs argue that even if the Defendants did not  consent to trial of a 200,000 B/D expansion claim, the district court still should  have granted the Plaintiffs' motion to amend the Pretrial Order because the  Defendants failed to show that they would be prejudiced by the trial of the new  claim.8  This argument, however, relies on an  incorrect interpretation of the  district court's reasoning.  The district court did not conclude merely that the  Defendants failed to consent, but also that the evidence at issue presented no new  claim.  Although Rule 15(b) does allow a court, under certain circumstances, to  amend pleadings to conform to evidence even when the opposing party objected  to that evidence, application of any portion of Rule 15(b) is appropriate only  when an issue "not raised by the pleadings" has, in fact, been presented.  Fed. R.  Civ. P. 15(b).  As discussed above, the district court did not abuse its discretion  in concluding the testimony about the longstanding aspiration to expand Pine  Bend to 200,000 B/D presented no issues not raised in the pleadings, both  because the Plaintiffs were previously aware of this evidence and because this  evidence was relevant to other issues already being tried.  Rule 15(b), therefore,  does not apply at all to this testimony, and this court need not undertake a Rule  15(b) prejudice analysis with respect to that testimony.  Thus, we affirm the  district court's denial of the Plaintiffs' motion to amend the pleadings to conform  to the evidence.

B.  Accounting Claims

62
During discovery, the Plaintiffs obtained, for the first time, a document  entitled "Extraordinary Items 1982," a list of company expenses and other  accounting items from 1982 prepared by KII's controller, Milton Hall.  After  discovering the existence of Hall's list, the Plaintiffs were granted leave of court  to amend their complaint, adding allegations about KII's accounting treatment of  the items on Hall's list.  They contended the Defendants' 1982 financial  statements, upon which the Plaintiffs relied when valuing KII stock for the SPA,  failed to identify the items on Hall's list as non-recurring.  Because these  expenses were, according the Plaintiffs, actually non-recurring in nature, the  Plaintiffs undervalued the company by approximately $283 million.

63
The Plaintiffs sought recovery for these alleged mischaracterizations as a  violation of both the Full Disclosure and the Generally Accepted Accounting  Principles ("GAAP") warranties contained in the SPA, as well as the Defendants'  fiduciary duty of full disclosure.  With respect to these accounting claims, the  Plaintiffs raise three issues on appeal: (1) whether the district court improperly  required the Plaintiffs to prove, as a predicate for all of their accounting claims,  that these expenses were "unusual" or "infrequently occurring" as defined by  GAAP; (2) whether the district court abused its discretion by failing to amend the  1998 Pretrial Order9 to make clear that the  accounting claims did not hinge on  the jury's finding the items were "unusual" or "infrequently occurring" as  defined by GAAP; and (3) whether the district court erroneously denied the  Plaintiffs an opportunity to present certain rebuttal testimony to the defense  theory on these claims.

64
1. Requiring Proof of "Unusual" or "Infrequently Occurring"  Losses     Under GAAP

65
In the 1998 Pretrial Order, the Plaintiffs set forth the following claims:

66
KII employed accounting methods that were designed  intentionally to understate KII's earnings and assets in the financial  statements. . . .

67
To diminish its apparent earnings, KII therefore employed the  following accounting practice which violated GAAP and constituted  breaches of both warranties in the Stock Purchase and Sale  Agreement (quoted above): KII failed to disclose its unusual and/or  infrequently occurring losses.  KII categorized these losses as  recurring expenses or depreciation, thereby artificially reducing what  appeared to be KII's ordinarily recurring income.

68
(emphasis added)

69
Later that year, in ruling on a defense motion in limine seeking to exclude  some of the Plaintiffs' expert testimony on the accounting claims, the district  court responded to the parties' arguments about the parameters of these claims:  "If the plaintiffs intend to pursue an allegation that the defendants failed to  disclose information on items that are neither unusual or infrequently occurring  under GAAP, then the court rules that such an allegation or theory is outside the  plaintiffs' accounting claim as pleaded in the pretrial order . . . ."  The district  court looked to the 1998 Pretrial Order, which articulated only one factual basis  for the Plaintiffs' accounting claim regarding these expenses: "KII failed to  disclose its unusual and/or infrequently occurring losses."  Additionally, the  district court noted the Plaintiffs "chose to define these losses with accounting  parlance borrowed from GAAP."  Thus, the district court concluded the Plaintiffs  must prove the Defendants failed to disclose "unusual" or "infrequently  occurring" items, as defined by GAAP, to prevail on their accounting claims and  therefore excluded any expert testimony on disclosure requirements for losses  that were not "unusual and/or infrequently occurring."

70
At trial, Alfred Eckert, a former Goldman Sachs investment banker who  led the team hired by William Koch to value KII for purposes of the SPA,  explained that when valuing a company's stock, he would add back into the  company's earnings certain non-recurring losses.  He further testified that his  decision to add back these items depended not on generally-accepted accounting  principles, but simply on whether, in his opinion, the losses likely would recur. On the Defendants' motion and over the Plaintiffs' objection, the district court  then instructed the jury that the "plaintiffs' accounting claim is limited to the  defendants' failure to disclose items that are unusual and/or infrequently  occurring as those terms are defined by [GAAP]" and to disregard Eckert's  testimony addressing the treatment of non-recurring items that do not fall within  these definitions.  The district court also issued an order (the "May 12, 1998  Order") consistent with these instructions resolving that the accounting claims  were predicated on the Plaintiffs' ability to prove the losses at issue were unusual  or infrequently occurring under GAAP.  Finally, both the instructions which the  court gave the jury at the close of the trial and the jury's verdict form all  indicated that to prevail on their accounting claim, under any legal theory, the  Plaintiffs were required to prove the Defendants failed to disclose infrequently  occurring losses as defined by GAAP.

71
On appeal, the Plaintiffs challenge the district court's orders and actions  hinging their accounting claims on proof that the items at issue were unusual or  infrequently occurring as defined by GAAP.  This court reviews for abuse of  discretion a district court's exclusion of evidence or issues from trial on the basis  of a properly-drawn, detailed pretrial order.  See Grant v. Brandt, 796  F.2d 351,  355 (10th Cir. 1986).

72
It is first important to note that the failure to disclose "unusual and/or  infrequently occurring losses" constitutes the sole factual basis pleaded by the  Plaintiffs in the 1998 Pretrial Order to support their claims regarding the  Defendants' accounting treatment of KII expenses.  Because a pretrial order  defines the scope of an action for trial, the Plaintiffs were thus obligated to prove  this one specific factual contention to prevail on their accounting claims.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e) (A pretrial order entered after a pretrial conference "shall  control the subsequent course of the action unless modified by a subsequent  order."); Trujillo v. Uniroyal Corp., 608 F.2d 815, 817 (10th Cir. 1979) ("When  issues are defined by the pretrial order, they ought to be adhered to in the absence  of some good and sufficient reason.") (citation and internal quotation marks  omitted).  The question then is whether the district court properly determined the  Plaintiffs needed to prove the losses were unusual or infrequently occurring as  defined by GAAP, or whether infrequent occurrence under some other standard  would have sufficed.

73
As the Plaintiffs point out, this court has recognized that a pretrial order  "should be 'liberally construed to cover any of the legal or factual theories that  might be embraced by [its] language.'" Trujillo, 608 F.2d at 818 (quoting Rodriguez v. Ripley Indus., Inc., 507 F.2d 782, 787 (1st Cir. 1974)).  A careful  reading of this court's cases reviewing trial courts' construction of pretrial  orders, however, reveals that a district court may more strictly construe a pretrial  order when that order has been refined over time, properly drawn, and drafted  with substantial specificity.  See, e.g., Cleverock Energy Corp. v. Trepel, 609  F.2d 1358, 1361-62 (10th Cir. 1979) (affirming trial court's exclusion of breach  of fiduciary duty issue as beyond the scope of the pretrial order when the  objecting party "failed to take timely advantage of an opportunity to enlarge upon  the general terms used in the order"); Rigby v. Beech Aircraft Co., 548 F.2d 288,  291-92 (10th Cir. 1976) (affirming trial court's exclusion of evidence of defects  in 40-gallon fuel cells of airplane when the plaintiffs' answers to interrogatories  and the pretrial order consistently alleged defects only in the plane's 31-gallon  fuel cells).  On the other hand, this court has more liberally construed pretrial  orders when the orders are not drafted with substantial care and specificity.  See,  e.g., Whalley v. Sakura, 804 F.2d 580, 582-83 (10th Cir. 1986) (liberally  construing pretrial order when "pretrial order . . . stated the claims of the plaintiff  in general terms"); Trujillo, 608 F.2d at 817-19 (broadly construing a pretrial  order that was "not properly drawn, [was] not definitive, specific, complete or  detailed").

74
In Cleverock Energy this court elaborated on the reasons for allowing  two  divergent approaches to construing pretrial orders:

75
This court is acutely aware of the evils of the inflexible application  of a pretrial order.  These evils are aggravated when the pretrial  order is unrefined.  We recently held [in Trujillo] that a coarse  pretrial order could not be narrowly applied to exclude one of three  subtheories fairly encompassed within its general terms.  However,  we should not lose sight of the important policies behind the pretrial  order mechanism, i.e., the narrowing of issues to facilitate an  efficient trial and to avoid surprise.

76
Cleverock Energy, 609 F.2d at 1361-62 (citations omitted).  Ultimately, the court  held, "We cannot in these circumstances conclude that the trial judge, who  presided over the pretrial conferences of this extensive litigation and had before  him the pleadings, motions and various pretrial statements of the parties, abused  his discretion in striking the . . . issue as beyond the scope of the litigation."  Id. at 1362.  In sum, while pretrial orders generally should be construed liberally, a  district court may more strictly construe such an order when the party favoring a  liberal construction has had ample opportunity to refine the order and when the  final order is properly drawn and substantially specific.

77
The Plaintiffs do not allege that the 1998 Pretrial Order was improperly  drawn.  Indeed, a pretrial conference was held on August 25, 1997, after which a  proposed order was drafted.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(d).  The district court signed  the 1998 Pretrial Order on February 6, 1998.  See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e).  Further,  this court has noted a proper pretrial order is "definitive," "sharpen[s] and  simplifie[s] the issues to be tried," and "represents a complete statement of all the  contentions of the parties."  Trujillo, 608 F.2d at 817 (citations and internal  quotations omitted).  The 1998 Pretrial Order in this case fits that bill, as many  years of draft pretrial orders, district court orders, and discovery served to focus  the legal and factual contentions of the parties and culminated in this final  pretrial order.  Additionally, because numerous draft pretrial orders were  produced over the many years of this litigation, the Plaintiffs cannot claim that  they lacked opportunities to draft the order to clearly encompass their claims. Because the 1998 Pretrial Order was properly drawn, with relative specificity and  definitiveness, and because the Plaintiffs had ample opportunity to refine the  order, the district court was not required to afford the Plaintiffs overly-generous  leeway in its construction of their accounting claims.

78
Indeed, a contextual reading of the 1998 Pretrial Order leads this court to  conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the  Plaintiffs' accounting claims predicated recovery on their ability to prove the  losses at issue were unusual or infrequently occurring as defined by GAAP. Again, the 1998 Pretrial Order frames this accounting claim in the following  terms: "To diminish its apparent earnings, KII therefore employed the following  accounting practice which violated GAAP and constituted breaches of both  warranties in the Stock Purchase and Sale Agreement (quoted above): KII failed  to disclose its unusual and/or infrequently occurring losses."  (emphasis added). As the district court noted in its May 12, 1998 order, the words "unusual and/or  infrequently occurring" are terms of art used in GAAP literature, which the  Plaintiffs earlier referenced at the summary judgment stage.  Furthermore, this  lone factual allegation mentioning unusual and infrequently occurring losses  immediately follows a portion of the sentence which asserts a GAAP violation.

79
To support their reading of the 1998 Pretrial Order, the Plaintiffs point to  the conjunction "and" between the asserted GAAP violation and the alleged  breaches of two warranties, as well as the reference to "both warranties."  This  language, however, bolsters, rather than subverts, the district court's construction  of the pretrial order.  The first of the two referenced warranties (the "GAAP  Warranty") warranted that the financial statements disclosed to the Plaintiffs as  of December 31, 1981 and December 31, 1982 "fairly present the . . . financial  condition . . . of . . . [KII] . . . in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles . . . ."  The second warranty (the "Full Disclosure Warranty") stated  that since December 31, 1982, the Defendants had provided all information  "which if fully disclosed might materially affect the valuation of the stock of  [KII] . . . ."  Although only the first of these warranties explicitly required GAAP  compliance, by pleading that the Defendants' accounting practices violated  GAAP "and" "both warranties," the Plaintiffs appear to assert that because these  practices violated GAAP they necessarily violated the Full Disclosure Warranty  as well as the GAAP Warranty.  Otherwise, the initial reference to the GAAP  violation which precedes the word "and" would be superfluous, given the factual  allegation using GAAP terminology which follows.  Thus, the claim ties GAAP  requirements to both warranties, as well as to the words "unusual" and  "infrequently occurring."

80
Similarly, this court rejects the Plaintiffs' argument that because they  separately pleaded breach of fiduciary duty, along with breach of these two  warranties, the court should not read the words "unusual" and "infrequently  occurring" as GAAP terms of art when applied to their breach of fiduciary duty  claim.  In its May 12, 1998 order, the district court responded to this argument:  "There is no reasonable construction of this pretrial order that is so liberal as to  permit a court to read terms of art in the same sentence as having two different  meanings simply because the party subsequently asserts an alternative legal  theory."  This court concurs with that assessment.  Further, as the district court  noted in that May 12 order, the Plaintiffs failed to exercise their drafting  prerogative to include a different, alternative, or additional definition in the  Pretrial Order.  Instead, they effectively expressed their satisfaction to be bound  by the GAAP definition.

81
Finally, in analyzing the 1998 Pretrial Order, the district court properly  considered the parties' motions, briefs, and arguments regarding the accounting  claims that came before it throughout the thirteen years in which that court  presided over this litigation.  The district court stated, "[T]he plaintiffs did not  allude during the summary judgment proceedings to any position that their two  legal theories on the accounting claim were based on alternative meanings to  'unusual and/or infrequently occurring losses.'"  The record bears out the  accuracy of this statement.   For example, in its Memorandum in Opposition to  the Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment, the Plaintiffs assert, "Thus,  Koch . . .  failed   contrary to GAAP   to disclose its 1982 writeoffs as  unusual,  non-recurring expenses."  (emphasis added).

82
In conclusion, this court holds that the district court, with its thirteen years  of reading and listening to the parties' assertions and arguments concerning these  accounting claims, did not abuse its discretion when it construed a properly  drawn, refined, and specific pretrial order as excluding any accounting claims not  predicated on proof that the losses at issue were unusual or infrequently  occurring by GAAP definitions.

83
2.  The District Court's Failure to Amend the Pretrial Order

84
The Plaintiffs further argue the district court erred by failing to amend the  pretrial order to permit the trial of accounting claims not predicated on proof of  unusual or infrequently occurring losses as defined by GAAP.  Although the  Plaintiffs never formally moved for an amendment of the pretrial order, this court  "interpret[s] the assertion of an issue not listed in the pretrial order as the  equivalent of a formal motion to amend the order . . . ."  Trierweiler, 90 F.3d at  1543.  Thus, by opposing the Defendants' in limine motion, eliciting Eckert's  testimony, and opposing the Defendant's motion to strike that testimony as  beyond the scope of the pretrial order, the Plaintiffs effectively moved for an  amendment of the pretrial order.

85
This court reviews a district court's failure to amend a final pretrial order  for an abuse of discretion.  See id.  Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16(e)  provides, "The order following a final pretrial conference shall be modified only  to prevent manifest injustice."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(e).  Furthermore, the burden of  demonstrating manifest injustice falls upon the party moving for modification. See R.L. Clark Drilling Contractors, Inc. v. Schramm, Inc., 835 F.2d 1306, 1308  (10th Cir. 1987).  This court considers the following factors when faced with a  challenge to a district court's exclusion of an issue by failing to amend a pretrial  order: (1) prejudice or surprise to the party opposing trial of the issue; (2) the  ability of that party to cure any prejudice; (3) disruption to the orderly and  efficient trial of the case by inclusion of the new issue; and (4) bad faith by the  party seeking to modify the order.10 Cf. Roberts v. Roadway Express, Inc., 149  F.3d 1098, 1108 (10th Cir. 1998); Smith v. Ford Motor Co., 626 F.2d 784, 797  (10th Cir. 1980).  This court should also consider whether the party favoring  amendment of the pretrial order formally and timely moved for such modification  in the trial court.   When a party fails to formally move for modification, it  neglects to focus the trial court's attention on the factors informing on the  amendment determination and generally prevents the creation of an adequate  record as to the other four factors, thus limiting our effectiveness in reviewing  the trial court's decision.  Cf. Hullman v. Board of Trustees of Pratt Community  College, 950 F.2d 665, 667-68 (10th Cir. 1991).  The failure to formally move to  amend the pretrial order in this case resulted in exactly those consequences.  This  court must therefore independently surmise the import of amending the pretrial  order to allow the trial of accounting claims not theretofore made.

86
Allowing the Plaintiffs to pursue any accounting claims without having to  prove the expenses at issue were unusual or infrequently occurring as defined by  GAAP would have significantly prejudiced and surprised the Defendants.  When  the district court issued its March 1998 in limine order, it fully apprised all  parties of its understanding of the pretrial order and the parameters of the  accounting claims for trial.  The Defendants undoubtedly relied upon that ruling  to prepare their own presentation of evidence as well as anticipate the Plaintiffs'  case.  As a consequence, the Plaintiffs' sudden attempt to inject into the trial  evidence which the in limine order had precluded necessarily surprised the  Defendants.  Additionally, a proper defense of these essentially new accounting  claims would have justified a mid-trial reopening of discovery, the addition of  new witnesses, and further motions and briefings.11  After spending thirteen years  honing their defenses, this sudden amendment of the pretrial order would have  significantly prejudiced the Defendants.  Cf. Joseph Mfg. Co., Inc. v. Olympic  Fire Corp., 986 F.2d 416, 420 (10th Cir. 1993) (stating that defendant's failure  to raise specific defense at an earlier possible juncture "cuts deeply against his  claim of manifest injustice").  Although the court could have allowed the  Defendants to undertake this additional work in order to cure the prejudice of  injecting new issues into the trial, to do so might have so severely disrupted the  orderly and efficient course of an ongoing trial that we cannot say the district  court's refusal was an abuse of discretion.  Finally, the Plaintiffs' neglect in not  formally moving for amendment of the pretrial order weighs against overturning  the district court's decision.  An analysis of the applicable factors leads this court  to conclude the Plaintiffs have not demonstrated that manifest injustice resulted  from the district court's failure to amend the pretrial order and correspondingly  they have failed to demonstrate the district court abused its discretion in not  amending the pretrial order.

3.  The Rebuttal Testimony

87
During the Defendants' case, three defense witnesses testified that KII was  by nature a risk-taking company and the losses at issue resulted from risky  ventures.  With this testimony, the Defendants sought to demonstrate that these  losses did not constitute unusual or infrequently occurring losses under GAAP  definitions. Because those definitions account for the "the environment in which  the entity operates," the Defendants presented testimony that KII operated within  a business environment in which it routinely took risks and suffered resulting  losses.  In addition, according to the Plaintiffs, one of these defense witnesses,  Lynn Markel, on cross-examination disputed the testimony of Milton Hall, KII's  controller, about some of the facts underlying the items on Hall's list of  "Extraordinary Items," which had triggered the Plaintiffs' accounting claims.

88
The Plaintiffs then sought to recall one of their accounting witnesses, Gary  Gibbs, on rebuttal.  The Plaintiffs proffered that this witness would testify the  Defendants' interpretation of the GAAP definitions was incorrect and Markel's  testimony disputing Hall was contradicted by the underlying documents and  financial statements.  The district court precluded this rebuttal testimony,  concluding the Plaintiffs reasonably could have anticipated this defense theory  and evidence in their case-in-chief.

89
The Plaintiffs now challenge that decision, arguing that prior to the  testimony of these defense witnesses, the Defendants' theory "had always focused  on the likely recurrence of a type of event or write-down."  With the  introduction  of this testimony, the Plaintiffs assert, the Defendants' theory "suddenly twisted  into whether [KII] was a type of company that had to report its non-recurring  losses the same way as other companies."  Thus, the Plaintiffs contend they were  entitled to present rebuttal testimony to this new defense theory and the district  court erred by denying them the opportunity to do so.

90
This court reviews for an abuse of discretion a district court's refusal to  allow rebuttal testimony.  See Marsee v. United States Tobacco Co., 866 F.2d  319, 324 (10th Cir. 1989).  "[W]here the evidence rebuts new evidence or  theories proffered in the defendant's case-in-chief, that the evidence may have  been offered in the plaintiff's case-in-chief does not preclude its admission in  rebuttal."  Bell v. AT&T, 946 F.2d 1507, 1512 (10th Cir. 1991).  When  plaintiffs,  however, seek to rebut defense theories which they knew about or reasonably  could have anticipated, the district court is within its discretion in disallowing  rebuttal testimony.  See Comcoa, Inc. v. NEC Telephones, Inc., 931 F.2d 655,  664 (10th Cir. 1991) ("Because plaintiffs were warned that rebuttal evidence  would be restricted and because they reasonably could have anticipated  defendants' evidence . . . [i]t was within the district court's discretion to disallow  plaintiffs' rebuttal evidence."); Fashauer v. New Jersey Transit Rail Operations  Inc., 57 F.3d 1269, 1287 (3d Cir. 1995) (holding that district court acted within  its discretion by precluding rebuttal testimony to that which reasonably could  have been anticipated).  This court in fact endows the district court with "broad  discretion" in deciding whether to admit or exclude rebuttal evidence.  United  States v. Olivo, 80 F.3d 1466, 1470 (10th Cir. 1996); see also Geders v. United  States, 425 U.S. 80, 86 (1976) (discussing trial court's broad powers to manage a  trial, including rebuttal testimony).

91
The GAAP definitions for "unusual" and "infrequently occurring" should  have alerted the Plaintiffs to the likelihood that the Defendants would argue the  nature of KII's business endeavors rendered the expenses at issue usual and  frequently occurring.  The Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 30, an  opinion at the heart of these accounting claims, refers to the following GAAP  definitions for "unusual nature" and "infrequency of occurrence":

92
Unusual nature   the underlying event or transaction should  possess a high degree of abnormality and be of a type clearly  unrelated to, or only incidentally related to, the ordinary and typical  activities of the entity, taking into account the environment in which  the entity operates.

93
Infrequency of occurrence   the underlying event or transaction  should be of a type that would not reasonably be expected to recur in  the foreseeable future, taking into account the environment in which  the entity operates.

94
Reporting the Results of Operation Reporting the Effects of Disposal of a  Segment of a Business, and Extraordinary, Unusual, and Infrequently Occurring  Events and Transactions, APB Opinion No. 30 (June 1973) (emphasis added). These definitions explicitly underscore the need to consider accounting items  within "the environment in which the entity operates" when determining whether  to classify such items as unusual or infrequently occurring by GAAP standards. Indeed, in opposing the Defendants' motion for summary judgment, the Plaintiffs  themselves referenced the language found in APB Opinion No. 30 and pointed  out the significance of this language.  The Plaintiffs should not have been  surprised, therefore, when the defense witnesses discussed the risk-taking  business environment in which KII operates and the effect of this environment  upon the accounting treatment of expenses.

95
Furthermore, testimony which the Defendants elicited on cross-examination early in the  Plaintiffs' case-in-chief also should have put the  Plaintiffs on notice of the Defendants' "risk-taking environment" theory.  In  cross-examining Milton Hall about his list of "Extraordinary Items," defense  counsel took Hall through his list item-by-item, having Hall explain the particular  business context in which each of the losses was sustained.  Hall thus provided a  broad overview of KII's various business enterprises, describing how each of  these enterprises both sought to make money and yet routinely suffered losses. One particularly relevant example of this testimony occurred when Hall described  KII's practice of trading in futures markets, which resulted both in occasional  profits and losses; Hall analogized KII's involvement in the futures market to an  individual who trades in the stock market.  The effect of this testimony should  not have been lost on the Plaintiffs.  Even at this early stage of the Plaintiffs'  case-in-chief, the Defendants sought to establish the significance of KII's  specific and unique business practices to their accounting treatment of particular  expenses.  Having listened to Hall's testimony, the Plaintiffs reasonably should  have anticipated the Defendants' further elaboration on this theory during their  own case.  Indeed, the Plaintiffs could easily have countered this testimony prior  to closing their case-in-chief.12

96
Finally, it is significant that the Plaintiffs never objected to the testimony  elicited by the defense as outside the scope of the defenses articulated in the  pretrial order.  Had the Plaintiffs raised such an objection, the district court might  have limited the controversial testimony and thus obviated the Plaintiffs' asserted  need to call a rebuttal witness.  Because the Plaintiffs should reasonably have  anticipated the evidence they sought to rebut and then failed to object to the  evidence as supportive of a new theory beyond the Pretrial Order, the district  court did not abuse its broad discretion in precluding the rebuttal witness.

97
Regarding the Plaintiffs' contention that this rebuttal witness was  necessary to counter defense witness Lynn Markel, who allegedly contradicted  the factual testimony of Milton Hall, the record both undermines the Plaintiffs'  characterization of Markel's testimony and reveals that plaintiffs' counsel  himself elicited the disputed testimony on cross-examination.  Markel initially  disagreed with facts and conclusions testified to by a different plaintiffs' witness,  Gary Gibbs, even stating, "I don't know where Mr. Gibbs got his information." The Plaintiffs' attorney then asked, "Did you know that, in fact, Mr. Gibbs had  gotten that information from Milton Hall?"  Markel replied, "No."  The  Plaintiffs' attorney then made a final attempt to draw out Markel's disagreement  with Hall, eliciting testimony which the Plaintiffs now claim demanded a rebuttal  witness: "Q: You told the jury last week that Mr. Gibbs had his facts wrong.  And  in truth, you disagree with Milton Hall, don't you?  A: Mr. Gibbs had his facts  wrong, sir."  Contrary to the Plaintiffs' assertion in support of their argument for  a rebuttal witness, Markel did not dispute Hall's testimony, but rather disagreed  with the testimony of Gibbs.  Further, even if Markel had disputed Hall's  testimony, the Plaintiffs' attorney intentionally elicited such testimony.  The  record makes clear that Markel was not an out-of-control or unresponsive  witness, or one aggressively attempting to advocate on cross-examination.  When  an attorney conducting cross-examination affirmatively draws out specific  testimony, as occurred here, the district court does not abuse its discretion by  disallowing rebuttal to that testimony.

C.  Evidentiary Rulings
1.  Admission of Evidence of Other Lawsuits

98
Prior to trial, the Plaintiffs moved in limine to exclude any evidence of  other lawsuits which they filed against the Defendants after filing the instant  action in 1985.  The court ruled, however, that evidence of these other lawsuits,  including that plaintiff William Koch named his own mother as a defendant in  one, demonstrated William's ongoing hostility toward his brothers Charles and  David.  The court further ruled that the evidence of these lawsuits was relevant to  William's purported reliance on Charles and David prior to the SPA, as well as to  his bias and credibility as a fact witness.  The Plaintiffs then moved for  reconsideration and modification of this in limine ruling.  In response, the district  court issued another order clarifying that evidence of other lawsuits could not be  offered to show William "likes to file lawsuits, that [he] files lawsuits devoid of  merit, or that [he] lacked proper feelings and consideration for his mother."  In  addition, the district court stated that William should have an opportunity to  explain his reasons for filing these lawsuits, but that there was no need for either  side to introduce evidence, comments, findings, or rulings from these other suits.

99
During opening statement and over the Plaintiffs' objection, defense  counsel noted that William's hostility toward his brothers was the motive behind  the instant suit, as evidenced by his and Frederick Koch's later suit against the  Koch Family Charitable Foundation and its trustees, which included "their own  mother."  Furthermore, while cross-examining William, defense counsel elicited  testimony that William had sued his brothers and mother in the Foundation  litigation, that he greatly upset his mother by subpoenaing her into court, and that  he later brought suit challenging his mother's will.  The Plaintiffs objected to this  line of questioning as irrelevant and a violation of the court's in limine order.  As  a consequence, the court instructed the Defendants not to delve into the specific  facts of these lawsuits.  Two days later, the Plaintiffs filed a motion for a mistrial  because the Defendants had unfairly elicited testimony about William's suing his  mother and injected evidence of the outcome of one post-1985 lawsuit.  The  district court denied that motion.  Two weeks later, however, the district court  precluded the introduction of any further evidence that William sued his mother. Finally, before submitting the case to the jury, the district court gave an instruction only to consider evidence of these other lawsuits "on issues of the  motives, intent, bias, and credibility of the parties," and not to consider whether  any party is overly litigious or to cast judgment on the propriety of the intra-family relationships.

100
The Plaintiffs now challenge the district court's rulings which allowed  introduction of this evidence of post-1985 lawsuits.  They argue this evidence  lacked relevance or, at best, had de minimis probative value which was  substantially outweighed by the danger of prejudice resulting from William's  admission that he sued his own mother.  "[T]he admission or exclusion of  evidence lies within the sound discretion of the district court and will not be  reversed absent an abuse of discretion."  Seymore v. Shawver & Sons Inc., 111  F.3d 794, 800 (10th Cir. 1997).  To determine whether a district court properly  admitted evidence of other acts, this court requires:

101
(1) the evidence was offered for a proper purpose; (2) the evidence  was relevant; (3) the trial court determined under Fed. R. Evid. 403  that the probative value of the evidence was not substantially  outweighed by its potential for unfair prejudice; and (4) the trial  court gave the jury the proper limiting instructions upon request.

102
United States v. Lazcano-Villalobos, 175 F.3d 838, 846 (10th Cir. 1999)  (quotation omitted).

103
The Defendants offered the disputed evidence for proper purposes.  The  Defendants first claimed that evidence of these lawsuits demonstrated William  Koch's bias.  See United States v. Abel, 469 U.S. 45, 51 (1984) (holding  that the  use of evidence of bias to impeach a witness is permissible); United States v.  DeSoto, 950 F.2d 626, 630 (10th Cir. 1991).  Additionally, the Defendants  asserted that this evidence bore directly on an essential element of several of  William's claims: whether William relied on the Defendants'  misrepresentations.13  See United  States v. Shumway, 112 F.3d 1413, 1421-22  (10th Cir. 1997) ("Prior acts evidence is clearly relevant to show an essential  element . . . ." (quotation omitted)).  The evidence therefore was offered for  permissible purposes.

104
Evidence of the post-1985 lawsuits, however, did not in fact bear upon  these two stated purposes.  Thus, the district court should have excluded the  evidence as irrelevant.  Federal Rule of Evidence 401 defines relevant evidence  as "evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of  consequence to the determination of the action more or less probable than it  would be without the evidence."  Fed. R. Evid. 401.  Federal Rule of Evidence  402 bars the introduction of any evidence that is not relevant.  See Fed. R. Evid.  402.  This court first fails to understand how evidence that William filed these  lawsuits actually demonstrates to any degree that William's testimony may be less  credible due to his bias against his brothers, particularly when the Defendants did  not, and perhaps could not, show that these lawsuits were frivolous.  The Second  Circuit rejected the precise argument advanced by the Defendants, concluding  that evidence of other suits brought by a plaintiff against the defendants "go[es]  to character rather than bias."  Outley v. City of New York, 837 F.2d 587, 594 (2d  Cir. 1988).  Although the Outley court recognized the possibility that evidence of  other lawsuits could be probative as to bias, "the particular details of each action,  and the extent to which the bringing of each action was justified, must be before  the jury" to render the evidence relevant and admissible.  Id. at 595.  Here, the  district court precluded such an examination of the details and merit of the  lawsuits, and thus, the evidence admitted was not relevant to William's alleged  bias.

105
Additionally, the evidence admitted was not relevant to the issue of  William's reliance on his brothers' representations in signing the SPA.  The  evidence concerned lawsuits filed at least two years after the SPA and in part  indicated William had sued his mother.  Though the filing of these lawsuits might  demonstrate William's distrust of his brothers after 1985, the parties entered into  the SPA in 1983.  This evidence thus lacks probative value as to William's  reliance on his brothers in entering into that 1983 agreement.  Furthermore,  evidence that William sued his mother, even if such a suit had been brought prior  to the 1983 SPA, demonstrates nothing about his attitude toward and reliance  upon his brothers.  Because the contested evidence is irrelevant to the stated  purposes for which it was offered, this court concludes that the district court  erred in admitting it.

106
When a trial court erroneously receives evidence, this court will reverse the  jury's verdict "only if the error prejudicially affects a substantial right of a  party."  Sanjuan v. IBP, Inc., 160 F.3d 1281, 1296 (10th Cir. 1998).  This court  deems such wrongly admitted evidence prejudicial only if we reasonably  conclude that the jury would have reached a different result without that  evidence.  See id.  Having reviewed the transcript of this trial, this court cannot reasonably conclude  that the jury would have found for the Plaintiffs had it not learned of these other  lawsuits.  In the context of this eleven week trial, it is extremely doubtful that the  lone, brief colloquy between defense counsel and William about suing his  brothers and mother and one passing  mention of this evidence in the Defendants'  opening statement caused the jury to find for the Defendants.  Therefore,  although the district court did err in admitting the disputed evidence, that error  did not sufficiently prejudice the Plaintiffs to warrant reversal of the judgment.

107
2.   The Denial of Cross-Examination on Charles Koch's  Character

108
A number of defense witnesses, including Charles Koch himself, testified  to Charles' honesty and integrity, as well as his positive management style.  The  Plaintiffs repeatedly sought to ask these witnesses whether in rendering their  character opinions they knew about or considered certain instances which might  call into question Charles' honesty.  Specifically, the Plaintiffs wanted to ask  about three such instances: (1) a United States Senate Report which detailed  KII's widespread theft and fraudulent reporting practices in the 1980's; (2) a  1974 federal court decision finding KII liable for fraud; and (3) two 1997  retaliatory discharge and age discrimination lawsuits filed against KII.

109
The district court denied the Plaintiffs the opportunity to ask about these  instances, concluding there was "little or no probative value" regarding Charles'  honesty, and the danger of confusion, prejudice, and delay substantially  outweighed the probative value.  The Plaintiffs maintain the district court erred  in precluding their cross-examination.  This court will not reverse a district  court's exclusion of evidence absent an abuse of discretion.  See Seymore, 111  F.3d at 800.

110
In Securities & Exchange Commission v. Peters, this court held that the  district court had abused its discretion in refusing to allow the SEC to ask, on  cross-examination, both Peters and seven of his character witnesses whether they  had heard about other fraud suits filed against him.  978 F.2d 1162, 1164 (10th  Cir. 1992).  The questions which the Plaintiffs in this case sought to ask,  however, differ significantly from those at issue in Peters.  In Peters, the  SEC  sought to test the accuracy of Peters' factual testimony and his witnesses'  character testimony by asking if they were aware of two previous fraud suits  brought against Peters personally.  See id. at 1169.  In contrast, these  Plaintiffs  undertook to challenge the character testimony by asking the witnesses if they  had heard about instances of dishonesty by KII, the corporation, not by  Charles  Koch the individual.

111
Although the Plaintiffs maintain these instances of KII's dishonesty also  implicate Charles' own trustworthiness, the nexus between KII's conduct and that  of Charles in these instances is not nearly as strong as the Plaintiffs suggest.  In  its 1974 order finding KII liable for fraud, a federal district court may have noted  some of Charles' activities within the company relevant to the fraud action, but it  never concluded that he personally committed fraud.  The Senate Report focuses  almost entirely on the deceptive and illegal practices of KII, and, although the  report does impliedly question the veracity of Charles' statements to committee  investigators, it does not explicitly state, as the Plaintiffs assert, that Charles lied. Finally, the retaliatory dismissal and age discrimination complaints name KII as  the defendant and allege no wrongdoing whatsoever by Charles Koch; even had  these complaints targeted Charles, this court fails to see how allegations of  retaliation and age discrimination bear upon the alleged wrongdoer's honesty. This court thus agrees with the district court's conclusion that these instances  have no real probative value regarding Charles' character for honesty.

112
The district court also did not abuse its discretion in determining the little  probative value that these instances might have is substantially outweighed by the  danger of unfair prejudice, confusion, and waste of time.  This court has  recognized that exclusion of evidence under Rule 403 is "an extraordinary  remedy to be used sparingly" and reviews a district court's decision to do so for  abuse of discretion.  K-B Trucking Co. v. Riss Int'l Corp., 763 F.2d 1148, 1155  (10th Cir.1985) (quotation omitted).  For the jury to properly assess the weight of  this evidence, the court would have needed to allow both sides to explain how  instances reflecting KII's dishonesty as a corporation might or might not  implicate Charles' personal character for honesty.  The district court, therefore,  would have entertained a series of virtual mini-trials on these rather collateral  events.  Such diversions from the trial's focus would have wasted considerable  time and potentially created unnecessary confusion in the minds of the jurors.  Because these instances of dishonesty at most only tangentially implicate  Charles' own character and the jury could have become confused about the  tenuous nature of this link, there existed a definite danger that this minimally  probative evidence would unfairly prejudice Charles.  Therefore, the district  court did not abuse its discretion in excluding these questions under Rule 403.

D.  Jury Instructions

113
For their Pine Bend claims, the Kansas Plaintiffs and the Texas Plaintiffs  separately requested jury instructions on fraudulent misrepresentation which  defined materiality under a subjective standard.  The district court, however,  denied these requests and instead gave instructions defining materiality in  objective terms.14  Both the Plaintiffs and  the Texas Plaintiffs maintain on appeal  that Kansas and Texas law define materiality subjectively.  In addition, the  Plaintiffs challenge the district court's instruction on fiduciary duty.  Finally, the  Texas Plaintiffs also appeal the district court's refusal to give instructions or  submit a special verdict or a general verdict with interrogatories on their Texas  common law constructive fraud and Texas Securities Act claims.

114
This court reviews jury instructions de novo and reverses only when  deficient instructions are prejudicial.15 See Coleman v. B-G Maintenance  Management of Colo., Inc., 108 F.3d 1199, 1202 (10th Cir. 1997).  In assessing  the propriety of jury instructions concerning state law claims, this court has a  duty to apply state law as announced by the state's highest court.  See Shugart v.  Central Rural Elec. Co-op., 110 F.3d 1501, 1504-05 (10th Cir. 1997).  If,  however, the state's highest court has not decided the issue presented, we may  either certify the question to that court or predict how it would rule.  See Fields  v. Farmers Ins. Co., 18 F.3d 831, 834 (10th Cir. 1994); Coletti v. Cudd Pressure  Control, 165 F.3d 767, 775 (10th Cir. 1999); 10th Cir. R. 27.1.  Furthermore,  "this court must . . . follow any intermediate state court decision unless other  authority convinces us that the state supreme court would decide otherwise." Daitom, Inc. v. Pennwalt Corp., 741 F.2d 1569, 1574 (10th Cir. 1984).

1.  Kansas Standard of Materiality

115
To support their contention that the proper definition of materiality under  Kansas fraudulent misrepresentation law is a subjective one, the Plaintiffs rely on  four Kansas cases and the Kansas Judicial Council's Pattern Instructions ("PIK"). The first two cases to which the Plaintiffs cite do not in fact recite any materiality  definition.  See State ex rel. Stephan v. GAF Corp., 747 P.2d 1326,  1331 (Kan.  1987); Dushane v. Union Nat'l Bank, 576 P.2d 674, 678 (Kan. 1978).  Although  the Plaintiffs' next case, Fisher v. Mr. Harold's Hair Lab, Inc., does state a  subjective definition of materiality, several paragraphs later the court also  articulates an objective standard.  See 527 P.2d 1026, 1032 (Kan. 1974).  It is  only the Plaintiffs' final case, McGuire v. Gunn, which clearly defines materiality  in subjective terms.  See 300 P. 654, 656 (Kan. 1931).  McGuire,  however, has  aged nearly seventy years, and the Kansas Supreme Court long ago ceased relying  upon it,16 instead now applying an  objective standard.  Finally, PIK Civ.3d  127.40 (1997), which the Plaintiffs maintain directs courts to issue an instruction  defining materiality subjectively, speaks to this issue as inconsistently as Fisher. Although the proposed instruction states, "A representation is material when it  relates to some matter that is so substantial as to influence the party to whom it  was made," the comments following provide, "Materiality of representation is  defined in Griffith v. Byers Constr. Co. . . . and Timi v. Prescott State  Bank . . . ."  As discussed below, both Griffith and Timi unequivocally define  materiality in  objective terms.

116
This court has previously stated that in a fraudulent misrepresentation  action pursuant to Kansas law, "A fact is material if it is one to which a  reasonable person would attach importance in determining his or her choice of  action in the transaction involved."17 City of Wichita v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 72  F.3d 1491, 1495 (10th Cir. 1996) (citing Timi, 553 P.2d at 325).  Following the  doctrine of stare decisis, one panel of this court must follow a prior panel's  interpretation of state law, absent a supervening declaration to the contrary by  that state's courts or an intervening change in the state's law.  Cf. Kinnison v.  Houghton, 432 F.2d 1274, 1277 (10th Cir. 1970) (concluding that the panel need  not look to a Tenth Circuit opinion addressing state law which supported the  appellant's position, because an intervening state court decision held to the  contrary).  Because the Plaintiffs have failed to alert us to any supervening  Kansas decisions contrary to U.S. Gypsum's reading of the materiality element in  a Kansas fraud action, and we have located no such authority, this court is bound  by U.S. Gypsum's conclusion that Kansas law defines materiality under an  objective standard in a state fraud action.

117
Moreover, negotiating the labyrinth of Kansas jurisprudence confirms that  the standard of materiality for fraudulent misrepresentation, as presently defined  by the Kansas Supreme Court, is an objective one.  In Griffith, a case involving  an action for fraudulent concealment, the Kansas Supreme Court first indicated  that such an action is governed by the identical legal standard as a fraudulent  misrepresentation claim.  See 510 P.2d 198, 205 (Kan. 1973).  In defining  materiality for such an action, the Kansas Supreme Court stated, "A fact is  material if it is one to which a reasonable [person] would attach importance." Id.; see also Timi, 553 P.2d 315, 317, 325 (Kan. 1976) (defining materiality in  the same terms in a fraudulent misrepresentation case).  Indeed, in its recent  review of a consumer protection action alleging illegal misrepresentation, the  Kansas Supreme Court relied on Griffith's objective definition of materiality. See York v. InTrust Bank, N.A., 962 P.2d 405, 420 (Kan. 1998); see also Farrel  v. General Motors Corp., 815 P.2d 538, 548 (Kan. 1991).  Furthermore, in  discussing the elements of fraud by silence, the Kansas Supreme Court recently  noted that a duty to disclose material facts only arises when the other party would reasonably expect disclosure.  See OMI Holdings Inc. v. Howell, 918  P.2d 1274,  1300-01 (Kan. 1996).   This court's review of Kansas law and binding Tenth  Circuit precedent thus leads to the conclusion that the district court properly  instructed the jury on materiality under Kansas law.

2.  Texas Standard of Materiality

118
In contrast, the Texas Plaintiffs correctly characterize as subjective the  definition of materiality under their two distinct claims, i.e., Texas common law  fraud and a violation of section 27.01 of the Texas Business & Commercial Code  ("section 27.01").18  Although  the Texas Supreme Court has not recently  articulated a materiality definition for either of these two causes of action,  numerous Texas Court of Appeals and Fifth Circuit opinions lead this court to  agree with the position taken by the Texas Plaintiffs.  Discussing Texas common  law fraud, the Texas Court of Appeals recently stated, "A misrepresentation is  material if it induced the complaining party to enter into the contract." Marburger v. Seminole Pipeline Co., 957 S.W.2d 82, 86 n.4 (Tex. App.1997, writ  denied)   Marburger simply follows a long line of cases establishing this  subjective standard.  See, e.g., Hart v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 756  S.W.2d 27, 29  (Tex. App. 1988, no writ); Sawyer v. Pierce, 580 S.W.2d 117, 124 (Tex. App.  1979, writ ref'd n.r.e.); Putnam v. Bromwell, 11 S.W. 491, 492 (Tex. 1889). Additionally, the Fifth Circuit has noted that Texas common law fraud, unlike  federal securities fraud, defines materiality in subjective terms. See In re Sioux  Ltd., Securities Litigation v. Coopers & Lybrand, 914 F.2d 61, 65-66 (5th Cir.  1990), implied overruling on other grounds recognized by,Pacific Mut. Ins.  Co.  v. First RepublicBank Corp., 997 F.2d 39, 41 (5th Cir. 1993).  Indeed, a treatise  on Texas law states the following:

119
In order to constitute actionable fraud, representations must  pertain to material facts . . . .

120
The test for determining whether a represented fact is material  relates to the effect of the representation on the transaction in  question. . . .

121
A representation is not material if it appears that the  transaction would have been entered into notwithstanding the  representation.  On the other hand, a represented fact is said to be  material if the transaction would not have been entered into had the  representation not been made.

122
Elizabeth A. Wong, 41 Texas Jurisprudence, Fraud and Deceit § 13 (3d ed.  1998).

123
Admittedly, a few Texas cases have caused some confusion about the  proper materiality standard under Texas common law fraud.  Two recent Texas  Court of Appeals cases each confusingly recite both an objective and a subjective  materiality standard in a single sentence.  See Beneficial Personnel Servs. of  Texas, Inc. v. Porras, 927 S.W.2d 177, 186-87 (Tex. App. 1996, writ granted  w.r.m.); Beneficial Personnel Servs. of Texas, Inc. v. Rey, 927 S.W.2d 157, 168  (Tex. App. 1996, writ granted w.r.m.).  The objective language in these two cases  is drawn from another case upon which the Defendants rely, which merely quoted  a trial court's instructions employing an objective standard but never  affirmatively approved those instructions.  See American Medical Int'l, Inc. v.  Giurintano, 821 S.W.2d 331, 338 (Tex. App. 1991, no writ).  No other case to  which the Defendants cite suggests Texas common law fraud utilizes an objective  definition of materiality.19 Porras and Rey merely confuse the issue; they do not  overrule earlier cases and they antedate Marburger.  Therefore, this court is  convinced that Texas common law fraud jurisprudence establishes a subjective  standard of materiality.

124
Materiality under section 27.01 is also measured subjectively.  As the Fifth  Circuit noted, "Because the statute is derived from Texas common law fraud, the  reliance and materiality elements of section 27.01 do not differ from those of  Texas common law fraud."  Haralson v. E.F. Hutton Group, Inc., 919 F.2d 1014,  1025 n.4 (5th Cir. 1990); see also Fisher v. Yates, 953 S.W.2d 370, 380  n.7 (Tex.  App. 1997, writ denied) ("The reliance and materiality elements of statutory  fraud [under section 27.01] do not differ from common law fraud."); Keith A.  Rowley, The Sky is Still Blue in Texas: State Law Alternatives to Federal  Securities Remedies, 50 Baylor L. Rev. 99, 124 n.104, 163 n.198 (1998) (noting  that in contrast to an action under Texas Securities Act, an action pursuant to  common law fraud or section 27.01 merely requires a subjective showing of  materiality).   The Defendants have failed to alert this court to any authority that  treats section 27.01's materiality element as an objective one, and nor have we  found any such authority.  This court thus concludes that section 27.01 imposes a  subjective standard of materiality.

125
Finally, the district court's incorrect jury instruction sufficiently prejudiced  the Texas Plaintiffs to warrant reversal.  This court recently noted its own  conflicting precedent regarding the precise standard for reversal due to erroneous  instructions.  See Morrison Knudsen Corp. v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 175 F.3d  1221, 1236-37 (10th Cir. 1999). Coleman and City of Wichita v. U.S. Gypsum  Co. require reversal when a jury might have based its decision on an erroneous  instruction, even if that possibility was very unlikely.  See Coleman, 108 F.3d at  1202; U.S. Gypsum, 72 F.3d 1491, 1495 (10th Cir. 1989).  An earlier case,  however, indicated this court should only reverse when it is more likely than not  that the erroneous instruction affected a substantial right of the appellant.  SeeUnited States Indus., Inc. v. Touche Ross & Co., 854 F.2d 1223, 1253 n.39  (10th  Cir. 1988), implied overruling on other grounds recognized by, Anixter v.  Home-State Production Co., 77 F.3d 1215, 1231 (10th Cir. 1996).  Morrison  Knudsen did not need to reconcile these differing standards. See 175 F.3d at 1237.

126
Again, we need not decide which of these competing standards controls,  because the erroneous instruction here would require reversal under either  approach.  The district court's erroneous instruction on an essential element of  the Texas Plaintiffs' fraud claims effectively directed the jury to ignore the Texas  Plaintiffs' own testimony that they would not have entered into the SPA absent  the Defendants' misrepresentations and omissions.  Additionally, the Defendants  failed to present any evidence contradicting the Texas Plaintiffs' testimony about  their states of mind.20  Even under the  more burdensome Touche Rossastandard,  therefore, the erroneous instruction warrants reversal, because the error more  than likely, if not necessarily, affected a substantial right of the Texas Plaintiffs,  i.e., the right to have the jury even consider the primary and only direct evidence  on the materiality element.  The district court therefore committed reversible  error with respect to the Texas Plaintiffs' claims when it instructed the jury to  determine objectively whether the Defendants' misrepresentations and omissions  were material.

3. Fiduciary Duty

127
Relying upon a 1986 order by the district court, the Plaintiffs proposed a  jury instruction which stated, "The Court has found, as a matter of law, that a  fiduciary relationship existed between the plaintiffs and the defendants."  Over  the Plaintiffs' objection, the district court instead instructed the jury as follows:

128
To recover on their [fiduciary duty] claim, the  plaintiff(s) have the burden of first proving, by a preponderance of  evidence that is clear and convincing, that they did not voluntarily  and intentionally relieve the individual defendant(s) of their  fiduciary duty as directors or officers of Koch Industries.  If you find  the plaintiff(s) to have not met this burden of proof, then you shall  find that the individual defendant(s) did not owe a fiduciary duty.

129
If you find, however, the plaintiff(s) have proved that  they did not relieve the defendant(s) of their fiduciary duty as  directors or officers of Koch Industries, then it becomes the  individual defendant(s)' burden to prove, by a preponderance of  evidence that is clear and convincing, the following elements:          (1)  that concerning the alleged misrepresentations or  omissions, the individual defendant(s) completely and  truthfully disclosed to the plaintiff(s) or their agent(s)  all relevant facts, known to the individual defendant(s)  by reason of their office or position at Koch Industries  and not known by the plaintiff(s) or their agent(s), that  were material in affecting the value or price of the  stock; and

130
(2)  that the plaintiff(s) were paid a fair price for their stock  and that the terms of the transaction were fair, balanced  against the best interests of the corporation and all of its  shareholders.

131
In short, the first paragraph of this instruction required the jury to determine  whether a fiduciary relationship actually existed; if the jury answered this  predicate inquiry in the affirmative, it then needed to determine whether the  Defendants in fact breached their fiduciary duty.

132
The verdict form, however, guided the jury directly to the second question,  entirely ignoring the predicate inquiry of whether a fiduciary relationship existed. Question 6 on the verdict form stated, "Do you find on the fiduciary duty claim  that the defendants have proved that they disclosed those material facts  concerning Pine Bend Refinery to the plaintiffs which the plaintiffs or their  agents otherwise did not know and that Koch Industries paid a fair price for  the  plaintiffs' stock?"  The jury answered, "Yes."

133
The Plaintiffs appeal the district court's instruction requiring them to prove  the existence of a fiduciary relationship, arguing that Kansas law imposes a strict  fiduciary duty on corporate officers and recognizes no exception to this duty  when a plaintiff may have relieved an officer defendant of that duty.  As noted  above, this court will reverse a district court judgment only when deficient  instructions are prejudicial.  See Coleman, 108 F.3d at 1202.  Here, this  court  need not determine whether the challenged instruction constituted a proper  statement of the law, because the verdict form rendered any possible error in the  instruction harmless.  Although the jury was told in the instructions that they  would need to first determine whether the Defendants had been relieved of their  fiduciary duty, the verdict form never asked that question.  Instead, Question 6 in  the verdict form impliedly assumed that a fiduciary relationship existed and  queried only whether the Defendants had proved they did not breach that  relationship, to which the jury answered "yes."  Because the verdict form never  posed the challenged question to the jury but impliedly assumed the answer in  favor of the Plaintiffs and the jury found for the Defendants on the breach  inquiry, this court concludes any possible error in the district court's instructions  on the existence of a fiduciary relationship was harmless.  Due to this  harmlessness, this court need not reverse the judgment under either the Coleman/U.S. Gypsum prejudice standard or that of Touche Ross, even  if the  challenged instruction was erroneous.  See Coleman, 108 F.3d at 1202 (requiring  reversal when a jury might have based its decision on an erroneous instruction); U.S. Gypsum, 72 F.3d at 1495 (following Coleman standard even if the  possibility is very unlikely); Touche Ross, 854 F.2d at 1253 n.39 (requiring  reversal only when it is more likely than not that an erroneous instruction was  prejudicial).

134
4.  The Texas Common Law Constructive Fraud Claims

135
Prior to submitting the case to the jury, the Texas Plaintiffs proposed  instructions, definitions, and verdict questions on their Texas common law  constructive fraud claims.  Over their objection, however, the district court  refused to submit instructions or verdict questions to the jury relating to Texas  constructive fraud.  The court reasoned that those claims duplicated others and,  alternatively, that the Texas Plaintiffs had failed to include a constructive fraud  claim in the 1998 Pretrial Order.

136
In appealing the district court's decision, the Texas Plaintiffs maintain  Rule 15(b) required the district court to amend the pleadings to include a  constructive fraud claim.  Their opening brief, however, does not offer any  argument whatsoever that the Pretrial Order did in fact include a constructive  fraud claim.  The issue of the court's construction of the Pretrial Order is thus  waived on appeal.21 See Johnson ex rel. Johnson v. Thompson, 971 F.2d 1487,  1499 (10th Cir. 1992) (noting this court generally will not address issues that the  parties failed to brief).  Therefore, this court must only determine whether the  district court properly declined to amend the Pretrial Order.  We review that  determination for an abuse of discretion.  See Trierweiler, 90 F.3d at  1543.

137
Upon a party's motion, a trial court should amend the pretrial order to  include issues not initially raised in that order but tried by express or implied  consent of the parties.  Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b).  A trial court should find such  implied consent either when the consenting party introduces evidence on the new  issue or fails to object when the other party introduces such evidence.  See  Hardin, 691 F.2d at 457.  This court, however, has determined that "[w]hen the  evidence claimed to show that an issue was tried by consent is relevant to an  issue already in the case, and there is no indication that the party presenting the  evidence intended thereby to raise a new issue, amendment may be denied in the  discretion of the trial court."  Id.  The Texas Plaintiffs fully concede that the  evidence presented at trial to support a constructive fraud claim precisely  matched that evidence relevant to several of their other claims.  Therefore, the  Defendants did not impliedly consent to the trial of constructive fraud, and the  district court acted well within its discretion in declining to amend the pretrial  order to include an admittedly duplicative claim.

5.  Texas Securities Act Claims

138
Similarly, the district court refused to submit to the jury the Texas  Plaintiffs' Texas Securities Act claims.  The district court determined the Act  required proof that the stock at issue no longer exists and no such evidence had  been presented to support that requirement.  On appeal, the Texas Plaintiffs argue  the district court improperly construed the statute.  They acknowledge, however,  that their appeal on this issue depends upon this court's concluding the  materiality element of fraud under the Texas Securities Act is a subjective one.

139
Unlike actions under Texas common law fraud or section 27.01,22 however,  a fraud claim pursuant to the Texas Securities Act does require proof of objective  materiality.  Most recently, the Texas Court of Appeals stated that under the  Texas Securities Act "an omission or misrepresentation is material if there is a  substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor would consider it important in  deciding to invest."  Weatherly v. Deloitte & Touche, 905 S.W.2d 642, 648-49  (Tex. App. 1995, writ dism'd w.o.j.) (emphasis added); see alsoAnheuser-Busch  Companies v. Summit Coffee Co., 858 S.W.2d 928, 936 (Tex. App. 1993, writ  denied) (same), vacated on other grounds 514 U.S. 1001 (1995); Granader v.  McBee, 23 F.3d 120, 123 (5th Cir. 1994) (same).  Indeed, one commentator  explicitly noted that materiality is defined objectively under the Texas Securities  Act, but subjectively under Texas common law fraud and section 23.01.  See Keith A. Rowley, The Sky is Still Blue in Texas: State Law Alternatives to  Federal Securities Remedies, 50 Baylor L. Rev. 99, 121 n.104, 163 n.198 (1998). The Texas Plaintiffs have cited no authority suggesting a subjective materiality  standard under the Texas Securities Act, and this court has found none. Therefore, because materiality is defined objectively under the Texas Securities  Act and the jury found the Defendants' omissions and misrepresentations were  not objectively material, the district court's refusal to submit Texas Securities  Act claims to the jury, if error, was harmless.

140
E.  District Court's Limitations on Plaintiffs' Fraud Claims

1.  The Rule 9(b) Order

141
The Plaintiffs' Fifth Claim for Relief in their Amended Complaint pleaded  fraud by the Defendants.  Specifically, the fraud claim alleged that the  Defendants misrepresented and concealed information about three particular KII  assets Koch Qatar, Inc., the Capa Madison Unit, and the Bates & Reimann wells. In addition, the fraud claim incorporated an allegation contained in paragraph  twenty-two of the Amended Complaint, which broadly stated,

142
during 1982 and continuing to the present time, defendants planned  and acted to conceal the true value of shares of stock in Koch  Industries from plaintiffs and the other selling shareholders and  carried out a scheme designed to understate the existence, extent and  value of property and assets owned directly or beneficially by Koch  Industries by failing to disclose the existence, location, ownership,  condition and true value of assets and property, including, but not  limited to, oil and gas reserves, acreage, prospects and properties, oil  and gas production and planned development of oil and gas  properties owned or acquired prior to June 10, 1983.

143
In an October 17, 1985 order, the district court limited the Plaintiffs' fraud  claims to those allegations concerning the three specifically referenced assets,  determining that the broad allegation contained in paragraph twenty-two did not  satisfy the particularity pleading requirement of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure  9(b).  The district court went on to grant the Defendants summary judgment on  the causes of action regarding two of the three assets Koch Qatar, Inc. and the  Bates & Reimann wells.  The Plaintiffs now challenge the district court's Rule  9(b) ruling restricting the Plaintiffs' fraud claims.23

144
This court reviews a district court's Rule 9(b) ruling de novo and  confines  its analysis to the text of the complaint.  See Schwartz v. Celestial Seasonings,  Inc., 124 F.3d 1246, 1251 (10th Cir. 1997).  Rule 9(b) provides, "In all  averments of fraud or mistake, the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake  shall be stated with particularity.  Malice, intent, knowledge, and other conditions  of mind of a person may be averred generally."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).  More  specifically, this court requires a complaint alleging fraud to "set forth the time,  place and contents of the false representation, the identity of the party making the  false statements and the consequences thereof."  Lawrence Nat'l Bank v.  Edmonds (In re Edmonds), 924 F.2d 176, 180 (10th Cir. 1991).  Rule 9(b)'s  purpose is "to afford defendant fair notice of plaintiff's claims and the factual  ground upon which [they] are based. . . ." Farlow v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell &  Co., 956 F.2d 982, 987 (10th Cir. 1992) (quotation omitted), implied overruling  on other grounds recognized by, Seolas v. Bilzerian, 951 F.Supp. 978, 981-82  (D.Utah 1997).

145
Here, the broad allegation in paragraph twenty-two of the Plaintiffs'  Amended Complaint, which the district court found insufficient under Rule 9(b),  set forth none of the specific and required allegations.  The statement  that the  alleged misrepresentations were made "during 1982 and continuing to the present  time" does not alert the Defendants to a sufficiently precise time frame to satisfy  Rule 9(b).  Furthermore, paragraph twenty-two fails to mention at all the place at  which any misrepresentations were made.  In addition, this paragraph specifies  nothing about the content of the alleged misrepresentations, instead reciting a  general statement that the Defendants "fail[ed] to disclose the existence, location,  ownership, condition and true value of [KII] assets and property."  Finally,  paragraph twenty-two failed to identify any specific Defendant who made these  alleged fraudulent misrepresentations or omissions, a particularly important  requirement in this case because of the number of individual defendants  involved.

146
The Plaintiffs cite Scheidt v. Klein, 956 F.2d 963 (10th Cir. 1992) for the  proposition that Rule 9(b) particularity requirements are relaxed when the facts  supporting a fraud claim are within the opponent's knowledge and control. Scheidt, however, is not so generous.  It merely holds that "[a]llegations of fraud  may be based on information and belief when the facts in question are peculiarly  within the opposing party's knowledge and the complaint sets forth the factual  basis for the plaintiff's belief."  Id. at 967.  Unlike the complaint in Scheidt,  paragraph twenty-two did not state that the Plaintiffs' allegations of fraud were  based on information and belief, nor did it set forth any factual basis to support  such a belief.  Instead, paragraph twenty-two broadly alleged that the Defendants  concealed the true value of KII stock without informing the court or the  Defendants of the source for this contention.  Moreover, the information and  belief allegations in Scheidt concerned the intent or purpose of the defendants'  actions, elements which this court noted were allowed to be pleaded generally  under Rule 9(b).  See id.  Paragraph twenty-two, however, does not address intent  or purpose, and thus Rule 9(b) does not excuse the generality of the Plaintiffs'  allegations.  Therefore, the district court properly precluded the Plaintiffs from  pursuing fraud claims based on the broadly stated allegations of paragraph  twenty-two.

2.  The Discovery Rulings

147
After substantial but unsuccessful efforts by the Plaintiffs to litigate the  claims stricken by the Rule 9(b) decision, the district court granted them leave to  file a Second Amended Complaint and determined that document to be the one  measuring the relevance of discovery requests.  The Plaintiffs then issued  subpoenas for production of documents from six different banks requesting all  documents relating to any loans or transactions with KII between June 1, 1978  and June 30, 1988.  In two separate orders, a federal magistrate judge limited this  discovery request to those documents relating only to "the Pine Bend Refinery,  the Pouce Coupe, Gilt Edge and Cold Lake properties in Canada, the equity value  of ABKO, and the alleged understated value of certain assets because of financial  and accounting policies and practices."  The Plaintiffs also subpoenaed from the  Ryder Scott Company all records of KII's oil and gas reserves for the years 1980  through 1988.  A federal magistrate judge also limited this discovery to those  documents concerning four KII assets the Pouce Coupe, Gilt Edge, Cold Lake  and Capa Madison properties.

148
The district court then affirmed the magistrate's decisions in its own order  of October 24, 1991.  In so ruling, the district court first determined that  paragraphs thirty-eight and forty-six of the Plaintiffs' Second Amended  Complaint did not delineate allegations of financial impropriety with sufficient  particularity under Rule 9(b) "to justify discovery into all accounting documents  and practices of Koch Industries during the relevant time period."  Additionally,  the district court reasoned that even under the Plaintiffs' breach of contract and  breach of fiduciary duty claims, Rule 26 barred the requested discovery because  the burden and expense of producing these documents far outweighed the  Plaintiffs' mere hope that they might find something upon which to base a claim. The Plaintiffs challenge the district court's orders limiting their discovery  attempts.

149
This court reviews discovery rulings for an abuse of discretion.  See  Pippinger v. Rubin, 129 F.3d 519, 533 (10th Cir. 1997).  Rule 26(b) provides,  "Parties may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, which is  relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action . . . .  The  information sought need not be admissible at the trial if the information sought  appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence." Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1).  Despite this broad language, the rule does allow a court  to limit discovery if "the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs  its likely benefit."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(iii).  Indeed, the 1983 and 1993  Advisory Committee Notes indicate this sub-section was added "to encourage  judges to be more aggressive in identifying and discouraging discovery overuse"  and "to enable the court to keep tighter rein on the extent of discovery."

150
The Plaintiffs attempted to justify their extraordinarily expansive discovery  requests as relevant to two broad, non-specific allegations contained in their  Second Amended Complaint.24  When a  plaintiff first pleads its allegations in  entirely indefinite terms, without in fact knowing of any specific wrongdoing by  the defendant, and then bases massive discovery requests upon those nebulous  allegations, in the hope of finding particular evidence of wrongdoing, that  plaintiff abuses the judicial process.  That is what occurred here.  The limits  which Rule 26(b)(2)(iii) place upon discovery are aimed at just such a tactic. Utilizing its discretionary power under this rule, the district court appropriately  recognized that the likely benefit of this attempted fishing expedition was  speculative at best.  Furthermore, the district court understood that to require the  six banks and the Ryder Scott Company to produce the massive amount of  documents requested, first weeding out privileged and confidential records,  would impose a serious burden and expense upon these non-parties.  The district  court thus properly determined that the burden and expense of these discovery  requests far outweighed their likely benefit.  Therefore, this court concludes the  district court did not abuse its discretion in limiting the Plaintiffs' discovery.

151
F. The District Court's Administration of this Case

152
The Plaintiffs contend the district court administered this case unjustly. They first assert the district court harbored an unfair disdain for the Plaintiffs  which led the court to oversee the case in a biased fashion.  The Plaintiffs then  list a number of the district court's rulings which were unfavorable to them as  evidence of the court's "harsh, lopsided and manifestly unjust" treatment.

153
To the extent that some of the specified rulings were contested in greater  depth in previous sections of the Plaintiffs' brief, this court has already disposed  of those arguments.  Furthermore, the Plaintiffs cite no legal authority at all in  contesting other rulings which they failed to address in prior portions of their  brief, thus waiving these arguments on appeal.  See Adler, 144 F.3d at 679  (noting that "[a]rguments inadequately briefed in the opening brief are waived"). Finally, at no point during the litigation did the Plaintiffs seek to have the district  court judge disqualified on the basis of bias or on any other grounds.  The  Plaintiffs thus waive their bias argument on appeal because they failed to timely  move for disqualification.  See United States v. Stenzel, 49 F.3d 658, 661 (10th  Cir. 1995).  Therefore, this court concludes none of these arguments warrants  reversal.

G.  Damages

154
Finally, the Plaintiffs assert the district court erroneously limited their  damages, arguing that their Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 claims warranted a  more liberal measure of damages than allowed by the court.  Because the jury  found for the Defendants and, with the exception of the Texas Plaintiffs' state  common law and statutory misrepresentation claims, this court now affirms each  of the district court's rulings which the Plaintiffs challenge, we need not address  this issue.

155
H.  Motion to Correct Misstatements at Oral Argument

156
The Plaintiffs have filed a motion under Federal Rule of Appellate  Procedure 27 to correct alleged misstatements by defense counsel at oral  argument.  Rather than a Rule 27 motion, the Plaintiffs' filing constitutes an  additional six pages of briefing on the merits, which in turn inspired a response  from the Defendants amounting to twelve more pages of such briefing.  Not to be  outdone or, in the alternative, to equalize the pages of briefing on the merits  under the guise of the Rule 27 motion, the Plaintiffs then filed a six page reply.

157
One thing this court did not need in this case was further briefing and  argument.  The court previously demonstrated leniency in allowing the filing of  oversized briefs pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(g) and Tenth  Circuit Rule 28.3 and by granting additional time for oral argument.  Regarding  the Plaintiffs' substantive claims in this motion, while it is true that one of the  statements challenged is a misstatement, defense counsel did not make the  utterance maliciously nor did he mislead the court.  Most disturbingly, the  Plaintiffs' motion reveals their apparent assumption that the court does not read  the record to confirm or refute representations as to its content.  That assumption  is wrong.

158
The Plaintiffs' motion is denied as an inappropriate attempt to circumvent  Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(c), which states, "Unless the court  permits, no further briefs [beyond the reply brief] may be filed."  Fed. R. App. P.  28(c).

IV.  CONCLUSION

159
In deciding the instant appeal, this court has reviewed a piece of litigation  spanning a decade and a half and a trial lasting nearly three months.  This court is  well aware that in such litigation the discretion of the trial court is important to  accomplish efficiency, notice, and fairness.  In this context, however, we could  not reasonably expect perfection in the district court's exercise of that discretion  or in its overall handling of the case; rather, what this court expects from the  district court is basic fairness to all parties.  Having reversed the district court on  but two of many issues presented on appeal, we are satisfied that the district court  achieved fundamental fairness in its presentation of this vast and complex piece  of litigation to lay fact finders.

160
This court hereby AFFIRMS the judgment of the United States  District  Court for the District of Kansas, except as to the Texas Plaintiffs' claims under  state common law fraud and section 27.01 of the Texas Business & Commercial  Code.  Regarding those two claims, this court REVERSES and REMANDS for  proceedings consistent with this opinion.

APPENDIX

161
Following is a list and discussion of the evidence which this court  considered in determining whether the district court erroneously granted summary  judgment on the Plaintiffs' 175,000 B/D expansion claim:

162
* A 12/13/82 letter from Keith Bailey, President of Williams Pipeline, to  J.W. Moeller, Vice President of KII, stating, "As you know, time is growing  short if we are to have an expansion in place by mid-1983."  This letter  undoubtedly refers to the 145,000 B/D expansion, not the 175,000 B/D expansion  idea, as even Plaintiffs allege the larger expansion was not intended for  completion until the end of 1985 while KII aimed to complete the 145,000 B/D  expansion by mid-1983.

163
* A 1/6/83 letter from KII's Vice President of Planning to Williams  Pipeline, stating, "Due to Koch Refining's current and planned future expansion  of our Pine Bend Refinery . . . Koch Refining and Williams Pipeline management  have been discussing several plans to increase current pumping capacity into the  Williams system."  Given the date of this letter, the "current expansion" language  must refer to the 145,000 B/D expansion.  The "planned expansion" wording,  however, is not expressly clear as to whether it refers to a 155,000 B/D or a  175,000 B/D expansion.  Reading this document in the context of the other  evidence, however, leads this court to conclude this language must refer to the  lesser expansion, inasmuch as there is no evidence that as of January 6, 1983 KII  had even started discussions with Litwin Engineering about a potential 175,000  B/D expansion.

164
* 1/20/83 Litwin Engineering notes from a meeting with KII  representatives, stating,

165
1. The purpose of the meeting was to establish a basis for design to  expand Koch's St. Paul Refinery No. 1 Crude Unit to 65,000 BPD. The unit presently operates at approximately 39,000 - 40,000 BPD. Koch is currently making modifications which will increase capacity  to approximately 50,000 BPD.

166
2. Target for processing 65,000 BPD would be start of summer,  1984.

167
These notes indicate that prior to the SPA, KII had inquired of Litwin about  possible designs for Unit 1 which would enable that unit to process 65,000 B/D. KII was therefore at least considering such an expansion prior to the SPA.  These  notes do not suggest, however, that KII had contracted with Litwin to do actual  design work required for the expansion or that KII had committed in any way to  effectuating the expansion.

168
* an undated Litwin Proposal, stating the following:

169
Litwin will provide engineering and estimating services to  provide Koch Refining Co. with comparative budget cost estimates  of 1) expanding Koch's existing St. Paul Refinery No. 1 Crude Unit  from the present operating capacity of  40,000 BPSD to 65,000  BPSD and

170
2) constructing a new 65,000 BPSD Crude Unit at the same  facility.

171
Litwin's initial emphasis will be the review of two cases of a  1979 study for expanding Koch's St. Paul No. 1 Crude Unit.

172
. . .

173
Litwin anticipates completion of this work approximately five  weeks after release by Koch.

174
This likely was written shortly after the January 1983 meeting with KII  representatives.  The Proposal, however, manifests only the internal dynamics of  Litwin regarding what it would do to study the potential expansion.

175
* a 2/1/83 Proposal from Litwin to KII:

176
Litwin proposes to provide process and mechanical  engineering and cost estimating services to compare [1.] expansion  of the No. 1 Crude Unit from 40,000 BPSD to 60,000 BPSD, [2.]  expansion of the No. 1 Crude Unit from 40,000 BPSD to 65,000  BPSD, and [3.] construction of a new 65,000 BPSD Crude Unit.

177
. . .

178
Litwin will review and update . . . two cases of its 1979 study for  expansion of the No. 1 Crude Unit. . . .

179
This proposal is valid for acceptance on or before February 15, 1983  . . . .

180
This document appears to be a contract offer from Litwin to KII.  Like the prior  undated proposal, this document reveals Litwin's offer to engage in these studies  but not KII's commitment to the studies or the actual expansion.

181
* 1/31/83; 2/3/83; 2/14/83 calculations by Litwin employees.  These  calculations were performed internally by Litwin and there is no direct evidence  that they ever reached the eyes of KII representatives.  This work, however, may  imply that KII had in fact accepted Litwin's proposal to study these design  options for the 175,000 B/D expansion.  Alternatively, these calculations may  merely suggest Litwin's dogged and hopeful pursuit of a contract which KII had  not yet accepted.  At most, however, this work merely evidences that KII was  studying the expansion option, but not that KII had committed to it.

182
* 3/4/83 Project Notes for internal use only, written by L.J. Ross of Litwin,  stating, "Attached is a marked-up Equipment Summary for both the 60,000 BPSD  and 65,000 BPSD Crude Unit Expansion . . . ."  Again, while one might infer  from these notes that KII had engaged Litwin to study these two options, there  remains no evidence KII saw these notes or that the matter progressed to a  planned expansion.

183
* an 8/3/83 unsigned memorandum entitled "Crude and Hydrotreater  Expansion - Pine Bend," which states, "We propose to utilize an existing FCC  Preheater and add a Preflash Tower to increase our No. 1 Crude Unit capacity to  65,000 B/D.  This plus 110,000 B/D capacity of the No. [2] crude unit . . . will  give us a total of 175,000 B/D crude capacity."  The words "our No. 1 Crude  Unit" indicate a KII employee drafted this memorandum.  The document,  however, merely proposes this expansion option.  It does not demonstrate that  KII was actually planning to execute this expansion.

184
* 8/9/83 Litwin Conference Notes from a meeting with J. Johnson of KII,  stating, "Litwin is to present Koch with the cost and time required to prepare a  process package with major equipment specifications for a new 65,000 BPD Unit  and Splitter Tower at the St. Paul Refinery."  These notes provide fairly strong  inferential evidence that KII had not accepted Litwin's earlier contract offer of  February 1, 1983.  If KII had accepted that offer, these cost estimates would have  been prepared much earlier.

185
* 8/19-20/83, KII Board of Directors Meeting Supplemental Information,  stating "Analysis of the expansion of Pine Bend crude and desulfurization  capacity have been underway for some time. . . . Design and optimization of  equipment of the two desulfurizers and the crude expansion are in progress. . . .  [A]pplication for the crude expansion permit will be submitted in September. Final cost estimates, LP optimizations and economics are being prepared."  In a  chart on the following page, titled "Pine Bend Expansion Comparison," the  number 157.5 appears as the "total" under the column for "Expansion Case  (MB/D)."  The first two statements in the Board notes must refer to the 155,000  B/D expansion, given the on-going nature of the stated expansions and the  numbers on the following page.  The statement regarding the permit, however,  could possibly refer to an expansion beyond 155,000 B/D.  Nonetheless, it is  significant that KII did not apply for a permit which might have pertained to a  175,000 B/D expansion until September 1983.

186
* a 9/26/83 Memo from KII employee T.W. Segar to KII President Bernard  Paulson, stating, "1. Koch presently has a refinery capacity of 137,000 B/D crude  oil and is operating at or near maximum.  2. Expansion plans are to add a third  crude unit of 70,000 B/D to raise design capacity to 207,000 B/D."  This memo  indicates KII may have abandoned all of the options for expansion to 175,000  B/D studied by Litwin, opting instead for a more aggressive expansion plan. Thus, this document constitutes evidence of KII's tentative approach, as of June,  1983, to a possible 175,000 B/D expansion, something less than "making plans."

187
* a 10/13/83 Memo Sheet from First National Bank of Chicago's Annual  Review of Koch, which states, "Koch is considering expanding the [Pine Bend]  refinery to 175,000 BPD and 'exporting' the additional product into Chicago,  Des Moines, and Kansas City areas to take advantage of the markets formerly  served by refineries which have closed."  This reference to the 175,000 B/D is  inconsistent with the prior document (the 9/26/83 memo), but perhaps First  Chicago was relying on older information.  More significantly, KII apparently  was telling First Chicago in October 1983 that it was merely "considering" this  expansion possibility.

188
* on 11/16/83, KII publicly announced its plan of adding a third crude unit  to expand to 207,000 B/D.  Again, this commitment to a more aggressive  expansion indicates KII had abandoned the two options which Litwin  investigated that would have increased Pine Bend's crude production to a mere  175,000 B/D.

189
* 12/8-9/83 KII Board of Directors Meeting Supplemental Information:

190
At the August 1983 Board Meeting, a combined project to  expand Pine Bend Crude capacity to 175 MB/D and construct two 10  MB/D hydrotreaters using equipment purchased from Sohio was  presented.  Several significant changes have occurred since August  and the current status of the project is discussed below.

191
. . .

192
Modifications to the [No.] 2 crude unit during the September  turnaround has increased crude capacity to 155 MB/D. . . . Although  a crude expansion still appears to be economically attractive,  additional analysis is required due to the reduced Canadian crude  availability and expanded base capacity.

193
In November, permit application was made to the Minnesota  agencies for construction of a 70 MB/D grass roots crude unit in  order to expedite permitting, which normally requires approximately  one year to complete.  Currently, two cases are being evaluated: (1)  Expand the [No.] 1 crude unit from 40 MB/D to 70 MB/D and (2)  Construct a new 70 MB/D crude unit and shut down the [No. 1]  crude unit.  The permit application would be adequate for either  alternative.

194
. . .

195
Major efforts currently are directed toward attaining the permits  necessary to expand the crude unit.  Analysis is progressing on the  two alternate cases under various crude availability and product  marketing scenarios.

196
This discussion apparently revives consideration of the Litwin options, or  perhaps these options never were abandoned, despite the implications of earlier  documents.  As of December 1983, however, the 175,000 B/D expansion option  was still mired in the "analysis" stage and KII simply was continuing to explore  this possibility.

197
* 2/21/84, Fourth Quarter Report from Bernard Paulson: "We have applied  for permits to increase our permitted capacity to crude to 200,000 B/D and expect  it to take over a year to secure the permit.  We would plan to be running to  170,000 B/D in 1986."  At this stage, some eight months following execution of  the SPA, KII was indeed making plans for an interim expansion at least  approaching 175,000 B/D with an ultimate expansion to approximately 200,000  B/D.

198
* 3/6/84 KII Inter-company notes, stating, "Bernie Paulson in charge of  Refineries stated that in 1983 the Pine Bend Refinery had a capability of  handling 138,000 barrels of crude oil and in 1984 that would increase to 152,000  barrels per day with the goal of being 170,000."  Again, it seems that now KII  had made a more definite commitment to the nearly 175,000 B/D expansion. These references to 170,000 B/D, however, do cast doubt on KII's pre-SPA level  of commitment to the 175,000 B/D expansion possibility.

199
* 5/7/84, First National Bank of Chicago's Annual Review of KII: "Also  under consideration are the replacement of the No. 1 crude unit for efficiency and  the expansion and revamping of the fluid unit."  Contrary to the prior two  documents, this review indicates that as late as May of 1984 KII was still only  "considering" this expansion.

200
* In Bernard Paulson's deposition testimony, he stated,

201
We did have Litwin review the possibility of expanding the No. 1  crude unit. . . .  It was a rather short cursory look at it, this is  January 26, I assume the latter part of '82.  I don't think they spent a  lot of time at it. . . . [W]e did not do it and rejected it I think because  it was too much money, you know, it was not effective."

Notes:

1
 The "Simmons Family" includes the Texas  Plaintiffs as well as  Alspaugh, Cox, and L.B. Simmons Energy, Inc.

2
 The Plaintiffs first filed a motion for  reconsideration of the grant of  summary judgment and a motion for leave to amend their complaint to meet Rule  9(b)'s particularity requirement, but the district court denied these two motions. The Plaintiffs then unsuccessfully petitioned this court for a writ of mandamus  compelling the district court to vacate the order denying them leave to amend. See Koch v. Koch, 1988 WL 130669, at *2 (D.Kan., Nov. 4, 1988). Later that  year, the Plaintiffs brought a separate suit before another judge of the United  States District Court for the District of Kansas, again alleging fraud and  misrepresentation regarding the SPA.  See Oxbow Energy, Inc. v. Koch Indus.,  Inc., 686 F.Supp. 278, 279-80 (D.Kan. 1988). The district court, however,  granted summary judgment to the Defendants, because it "required [the  Plaintiffs] to bring all claims of misrepresentation arising out of the [SPA] in one  action."  Id. at 282.  In that order, the district court stated,
[T]he court cannot condone plaintiffs' practice of running to a  different city within the district and filing a new case every time a  judge in a prior action makes a ruling adverse to that litigant's  position.  The court cannot be made a party to what is in effect an  appeal from Judge Crow's ruling in the 1985 action.
Id.  Finally, in 1988, in a suit brought by Charles and David Koch against  William Koch requesting specific performance of a sales contract concerning a  coin collection and real property, William counterclaimed, alleging he was  excused from performance due to Charles' and David's misrepresentations  regarding the SPA.  See Koch, 1988 WL 130669, at *1-*2.  Yet a third judge of  the same district court dismissed William's counterclaim as precluded by the  summary judgment order issued in Oxbow Energy, Inc. v. Koch Indus., Inc. See  Koch, 1988 WL 130669, at *3-*4.  After reciting the above quoted language from  the Oxbow Energy summary judgment order, the district court concluded, "This  counterclaim is the third vehicle which defendant has used to raise the same  issues . . . .  This court is even more emphatically unwilling to overrule the clear  decisions of two learned brothers."  Id. at *4.

3
 Although this 1993 Pretrial Order is not  dated, file-stamped, or signed by  the District Judge, and does not set a date for the pretrial conference, the parties  appear to have treated this proposed order as defining their claims and defenses  for purposes of the summary judgment motion.  This court will similarly treat the  1993 Pretrial Order.
After the district court issued its summary judgment order in 1997, the  parties drafted a new pretrial order ("the 1998 Pretrial Order") which reflected  the determinations made at summary judgment.  Thus, the 1998 Pretrial Order  looks much like the 1993 Pretrial Order, except that it does not include those  claims which the district court had ruled insufficient as a matter of law.  This  1998 Pretrial Order, which was subjected to the formalities normally required for  such orders, constituted the final pretrial order prior to trial and was used to  measure the dimensions of the trial.  See infra note 9.

4
 Due to the terms of the SPA, the breach of  warranty claim requires the  Plaintiffs to prove a failure to disclose any "event, condition, or state of facts . . .  which if fully disclosed might materially affect the valuation of stock of [KII] by  a prudent and knowledgeable investor . . . ." SPA, § 5(d) (emphasis added).  Under their breach of fiduciary duty claim, the Plaintiffs must demonstrate that  the Defendants withheld some facts affecting the value or price of stock or any  other matters which would tend to increase the value of the corporation's stock. See Sampson v. Hunt, 564 P.2d 489, 492 (Kan. 1977).  The common law fraud  claim requires the Plaintiffs to show KII knowingly or recklessly withheld  information to which a reasonable person would attach importance in determining  at what price to sell KII stock, and that Plaintiffs did in fact rely on this non-disclosure to their  detriment.  See McGuire v. Gunn, 300 P. 654, 656 (Kan. 1931)  (defining common law fraud); Griffith v. Byers Constr. Co., 510 P.2d 198, 205  (Kan. 1973)  (establishing when an omission or non-disclosure constitutes a  material fact for purposes of common law fraud).  Finally, to succeed on their  securities fraud claim, the Plaintiffs must show a substantial likelihood the  non-disclosed information would have been viewed by a reasonable investor as  having  significantly altered the total mix of information made available.  See 17 CFR  §  240.10b-5 (defining securities fraud under Rule 10b-5 of the Securities Exchange  Act of 1934); Basic Inc. v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 231 (1988) (establishing  when a fact is material under 10b-5).

5
 Attached as an appendix to this opinion is a  detailed list and discussion  of the relevant evidence.  See infra Appendix.

6
 The Appendix to this opinion, therefore,  does not include any evidence  of the alleged secret deal to reverse the Williams pipeline.  See infra Appendix. The summary judgment order did not in fact preclude introduction of such  evidence, because, as discussed above, that evidence also was relevant to the  145,000 and 155,000 B/D claims; indeed, the Plaintiffs presented such evidence  at trial.
Similarly, the Appendix does not include the "doom and gloom" evidence  which the Plaintiffs contend is also relevant to the 175,000 B/D claim.  See infra Appendix.  In short, the Plaintiffs allege the Defendants, while secretly planning  for these expansions, communicated to the Plaintiffs dire predictions about the  economic future of the refinery.  This court need not consider such evidence to  determine whether the Plaintiffs presented a material issue of fact regarding the  existence of a 175,000 B/D expansion plan, because this evidence really bears on  the separate issue of whether the Defendants withheld information about the  alleged expansion.  As stated above, this court need not address that question.

7
 This February 1984 commitment, however,  was actually to expand Pine  Bend's crude capacity merely to 170,000 B/D, something less than the amount  pleaded by the Plaintiffs.

8
 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(b)  provides,
If evidence is objected to at the trial on the ground that  it is not within the issues made by the pleadings, the  court may allow the pleadings to be amended and shall  do so freely when the presentation of the merits of the  action will be subserved thereby and the objecting party  fails to satisfy the court that the admission of such  evidence would prejudice the party in maintaining the  party's action or defense upon the merits.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(b); see also Hardin v. Manitowoc-Forsythe Corp., 691 F.2d  449, 457 (10th Cir. 1982) ("Even where there is no consent, and objection is  made at trial that evidence is outside the scope of the pretrial order, amendment  may still be allowed unless the objecting party satisfies the court that he would  be prejudiced by the amendment.").

9
 Unlike the 1993 Pretrial Order, this order  was file-stamped, signed by the  district court, and subject to a Pretrial Conference.  See supra note 3.  Indeed,  this was the final Pretrial Order prior to trial, which incorporated the summary  judgment rulings and ultimately controlled the course of the trial.

10
 The Plaintiffs contend the district court  was required to consider these  factors and its failure to do so itself constitutes an abuse of discretion.  This court  has never imposed such a requirement upon  a district court when deciding  whether to amend a pretrial order or allow evidence or issues outside the pretrial  order to be presented; rather, we have always discussed these factors as matters  which this court should consider to determine if the district court's decision  constitutes an abuse of discretion. See Roberts v. Roadway  Express, Inc., 149  F.3d 1098, 1108 (10th Cir. 1998); Smith v. Ford Motor Co., 626 F.2d  784, 797  (10th Cir. 1980).  Thus, the district court's failure to make explicit findings  under these four factors does not render its decision an abuse of discretion.  The  argument raised here by the Plaintiffs is particularly disingenuous, given their  own failure to formally move to amend the order.  The Plaintiffs simply cannot  claim an abuse of discretion by the district court for not reciting the factors for  consideration of a motion to amend a pretrial order when they failed to formally  make such a motion.

11
 Even if this court construes the  Plaintiffs' opposition to the in limine order as the equivalent of a motion to amend the pretrial order and thus views the  surprise and prejudice from that point in time rather than from the elicitation of  evidence during trial, the Defendants still would have suffered the prejudice of  having just four months to prepare defenses to legal theories which the pleadings  up until that point had failed to articulate.  Furthermore, and as discussed below,  analysis of the other factors firmly supports our conclusion that the district court  acted within its discretion in not amending the pretrial order.

12
 Only the seventh of twenty-four  witnesses called by the Plaintiffs, Hall  testified on April 16, 1998.  The trial had begun a mere ten days earlier, and the  Plaintiffs did not close their case until one month later on May 18, 1998.

13
 The district court gave the following  instruction to the jury:
I have instructed you, with respect to the plaintiff(s)' claims based  on theories of state law fraud, breach of fiduciary duty and Section  10(b), that the plaintiff(s) cannot prevail without proof of actual  reliance, that is, they would not have sold their shares at the price  actually paid without the defendant(s)' misrepresentations or  omissions. . . . [I]f you find that the plaintiff(s) did not actually rely  on any belief that the defendant(s) had completely and truthfully  disclosed the material facts but instead actively doubted the  defendant(s) and relied on the expectation that they could later sue  the defendant(s) for breach of warranty, then your verdict should be  for the defendant(s) on the plaintiff(s)' claims asserting theories of  state law fraud, breach of fiduciary duty and Section 10(b).
The Plaintiffs never objected to this instruction.  As a consequence, reliance was  treated as an essential element of these three legal claims.

14
 The Plaintiffs' proposed instruction read:  "A representation is material  when it relates to some matter that is so substantial as to influence the party to  [whom] it was made."  The Texas Plaintiffs proposed the following: "You are  instructed that a fact is material if the plaintiffs would not have entered into the  stock transaction without such misrepresentations having been made or facts  concealed."  The district court, however, settled on this instruction: "A fact is  material if a reasonable person would consider the fact important or significant in  deciding whether or not to sell his or her shares."

15
 See infra 66-68 (discussing  the degree of prejudice warranting reversal).

16
 The most recent Kansas appellate court  opinion citing McGuire for its  subjective materiality definition is Fisher, a 1974 case which, as noted above,  simultaneously stated an objective standard of materiality.  See Fisher v. Mr.  Harold's Hair Lab, Inc., 527 P.2d 1026, 1032 (Kan. 1974).

17
 The Plaintiffs contend this court, in  another case, also applied a  subjective definition of materiality under Kansas law.  Palmer Coal & Rock Co.  v. Gulf Oil Co., however, simply quotes a district court's instructions which  articulated the subjective standard, but does not itself endorse such an approach  as the correct one.  See 524 F.2d 884, 885 n.1 (10th Cir. 1975). The Palmer  Coalacourt noted neither side objected to these instructions, thus verifying that it  did not adopt the subjective standard in the instructions.  See id. at 885.

18
 Although the Defendants contend that  the district court erred in its  choice of law decision allowing the Texas Plaintiffs to proceed on two Texas  state law claims, the Defendants nonetheless expressly waived review of that  determination on appeal because they believe Kansas and Texas law do not differ  on the issue.

19
 Like American Medical, Miller v. Miller merely notes a trial court's use  of an objective definition in jury instructions without deciding the correctness of  those instructions.  See 700 S.W.2d 941, 948 (Tex. App. 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.). Bridwell v. State addresses criminal fraud under the Texas Securities Act, not  state common law fraud.  See 804 S.W.2d 900, 904 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991, no  pet.).  Shepard v. Rubin never articulates a materiality definition, though it  implicitly approves a subjective standard laid down in H.W. Broaddus Co., Inc. v.  Binkley, an opinion adopted by the Texas Supreme Court.  SeeShepard, 462  S.W.2d 316, 320 (Tex. App. 1970, no writ); Binkley, 88 S.W.2d 1040, 1042 (Tex.  Comm'n App. 1936).  Finally,  American Tobacco Co. v. Grinnell addresses the  element of reliance, not materiality.  See 951 S.W.2d 420, 436 (Tex. 1997).

20
 The Defendants did present evidence  indicating that a reasonable person  would not have been affected by the alleged misrepresentations in deciding  whether to enter into the SPA.  Certainly such reasonable person evidence may be  used to counter the Texas Plaintiffs' testimony because a jury could potentially  discredit the Texas Plaintiffs testimony based on the unreasonableness of their  assertions.  Nonetheless, the Defendants presented no direct evidence that the  Texas Plaintiffs ever said or believed anything contradicting their state-of-mind  testimony.

21
 In the Texas Plaintiffs' Reply Brief, they  argue "the phrase 'common  law fraud' used in the complaint and pretrial order includes constructive fraud  under Texas law."  They never raised this argument, however, in their opening  brief, and this court need not entertain an argument raised for the first time in a  reply brief.  See, e.g., Coleman v. B-G Maintenance Management of Colo., Inc.,  108 F.3d 1199, 1205 (10th Cir. 1997).

22
 See supra Section III.D.2.

23
 In addition to the district court's October  17, 1985 ruling, the Plaintiffs  challenge two later orders of the district court, issued on October 24, 1991 and  June 30, 1992, which they also claim constituted dismissals of allegations under  Rules 9(b) and 8.  Although the October 24 order did reference Rule 9(b), it  concerned discovery requests by the Plaintiffs, not dismissals of allegations or  claims.  Thus, this court will discuss the propriety of that order in the following  section of this opinion dealing with discovery.  See infra Section III.E.2. The  June 30 order addressed the Plaintiffs' motion to amend their Second Amended  Complaint, and the district court did not rely at all on Rule 9(b) or Rule 8 in  denying some of the proposed amendments.

24
 Both paragraphs thirty-eight and  forty-six contained broad allegations  that the Defendants did not provide financial information to the Plaintiffs in  accord with GAAP.  Paragraph forty-six recited one specific example of these  alleged accounting improprieties relating to the Pine Bend Refinery.