{"id":1018,"date":"2025-08-26T21:00:59","date_gmt":"2025-08-26T21:00:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.agencywebdesigners.com\/?p=1018"},"modified":"2025-08-28T16:18:39","modified_gmt":"2025-08-28T16:18:39","slug":"founder-vs-president-trial-to-decide-future-of-dog-toymaker-kong-begins","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.agencywebdesigners.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/26\/founder-vs-president-trial-to-decide-future-of-dog-toymaker-kong-begins\/","title":{"rendered":"Founder vs. president: Trial to decide future of dog toymaker Kong begins"},"content":{"rendered":"
A trial to determine who will own Kong, which grew out of a Denver auto shop to become a global pet toy valued at a half-billion dollars, got underway Monday.<\/p>\n
The three-week proceeding follows more than three years of litigation across two Denver courts and pits Joe Markham, Kong\u2019s founder, against his company, its longtime president and its other co-owner. At stake is millions of dollars and control of the Golden-based business.<\/p>\n
\u201cTo have this court force Mr. Markham to leave his company is simply wrong and this court should not do it,\u201d his attorney, Billy Jones, said in opening arguments Monday.<\/p>\n
Markham is accusing Kong, President KD Decker and co-owner John Nelson of freezing him out of decisions at Kong as part of a long-term plan to take over the business.<\/p>\n
\u201cMr. Nelson and Ms. Decker have engaged in a multiyear scheme to take Mr. Markham\u2019s company away from him and frankly, your honor, they have been somewhat successful,\u201d Jones said. \u201cWe need this court to force Ms. Decker and Mr. Nelson to simply play by the rules.\u201d<\/p>\n
Decker and Nelson, meanwhile, say they are the reasons Kong is a success today.<\/p>\n
\u201cKD\u2019s leadership made Mr. Markham and Mr. Nelson a massive amount of money,\u201d said Michael Carrigan, a lawyer for Decker, who has been president of Kong since 2005.<\/p>\n
Caught in the middle of this intra-company dispute is Central Garden & Pet. That company paid $25 million in 2022 for a 10% stake in Markham\u2019s holding company, which owns half of Kong. Central is accused of \u201cclandestinely\u201d buying the stake as the first step in an eventual takeover.<\/p>\n
\u201cAs exciting as it sounds for this to have been some conspiracy, this was a straightforward business deal,\u201d said Valeri Pappas, an attorney for Central. \u201cCentral does not go in and take over companies against their consent. Central has never taken part in a hostile takeover.\u201d<\/p>\n
Kong\u2019s origins date to 1970, when Markham, the owner of an auto body shop downtown, got a guard dog named Fritz for the business. When Fritz showed a fondness for the rubber axle stop of a disassembled Volkswagen bus, an idea formed. Kong was incorporated in 1976.<\/p>\n
Nelson paid $5 million for a 50% stake in 1999 and the two became 50-50 partners. That arrangement worked until the early 2020s, when Markham felt that Decker and Nelson were making self-enriching decisions without him and trying to push him to sell his 50%.<\/p>\n
Markham is asking Judge Chris Baumann to determine that Nelson violated their agreement, so Markham can purchase Nelson\u2019s shares and take over Kong. Nelson is likewise asking Baumann to determine that Markham violated their agreement by selling the minority stake to Central. He wants the Central sale voided and to buy out Markham\u2019s shares in Kong.<\/p>\n
\u201cKong is a great company, it is a huge asset to Colorado, and it should be kept in the hands of the people who built it into what it is today: John Nelson and KD Decker,\u201d Carrigan said.<\/p>\n
\u201cIt is worth remembering that without Joe Markham, there is no Kong,\u201d Jones countered. \u201cThere is no brand, there is no company, there are no sales, there are no toys.\u201d<\/p>\n