Mile Hi Vets v. Moreno
Mile Hi Vets v. Moreno
Mile Hi Vets v. Moreno
Opinion
23CA1428 Mile Hi Vets v Moreno 08-22-2024
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 23CA1428
Jefferson County District Court No. 21CV30839
Honorable Randall C. Arp, Judge
Mile Hi Veterans, a Colorado nonprofit corporation, and Mile Hi Veterans
Services, a Colorado nonprofit corporation,
Plaintiffs-Appellees and Cross-Appellants,
v.
Roberta Vigil Moreno,
Defendant-Appellant and Cross-Appellee.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED AND CASE
REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
Division IV
Opinion by JUDGE HAWTHORNE*
Johnson and Graham*, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced August 22, 2024
Achieve Law Group, LLC, Jerome A. DeHerrera, Aaron A. Boschee, Benjamin P.
Meade, Denver, Colorado; Belzer Law, Aaron Belzer, Boulder, Colorado, for
Plaintiffs-Appellees and Cross-Appellants
RVM Law, LLC, Rolf von Merveldt, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
and Cross-Appellee
*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art.
VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2023.
1
¶ 1 In this civil theft action, defendant, Roberta Vigil Moreno,
appeals the trial court’s judgment notwithstanding the verdict,
summary judgment, and other orders entered in favor of plaintiffs,
Mile Hi Veterans and Mile Hi Veterans Services.
1
Plaintiffs cross-
appeal the court’s determination of damages in its judgment
notwithstanding the verdict. We affirm and remand.
I. Background
¶ 2 This case arises out of a dispute over the ownership and
control of a nonprofit corporation originally incorporated as the Mile
Hi Chapter of the American GI Forum (AGIF). Before the dispute
began, the Mile Hi Chapter purchased real estate in Denver and
leased part of its parking lot to Verizon Wireless for construction of
a cellular tower. The lease required Verizon to pay the Mile Hi
Chapter a $90,750 lease payment in July 2021.
¶ 3 Plaintiffs allege that in September 2020, Mile Hi Chapter
members voted to disassociate from AGIF and changed the
nonprofit’s name to Mile Hi Veterans with the Colorado Secretary of
1
While there were other named defendants in the underlying
action, they are not parties to this appeal.
2
State.
2
Moreno alleges that Mile Hi Veterans’ disassociation from
AGIF was not recognized by AGIF, so she and other former Mile Hi
Chapter members, including Russell Lopez and Robert Mares,
renewed the AGIF charter to reassert control over the Mile Hi
Chapter’s property.
¶ 4 It is undisputed that Lopez filed documents with the Secretary
of State designating himself as Mile Hi Veterans’ registered agent,
changing Mile Hi Veterans’ business address to his and Moreno’s
house, and changing Mile Hi Veterans’ name to “American GI
Forum Mile Hi Chapter.” It is also undisputed that Moreno, Lopez,
and Mares then opened a bank account using Mile Hi Veterans’
Federal Employer Identification Number (FEIN) and its former
corporate name. At Lopez’ request and based on Moreno’s
explanation that “we are one and the same organization,” Verizon
tendered the lease payment into the newly created bank account.
¶ 5 Plaintiffs brought claims against Moreno and other defendants
for fraudulent representation, civil theft, conversion, tortious
interference with existing contractual relationships, unauthorized
2
Mile Hi Veterans separately created Mile Hi Veterans Services to
hold title to Mile Hi Veterans’ real property.
3
assumption of corporate powers, violations of the Colorado
Organized Crime Control Act (COCCA), civil conspiracy to commit
tortious acts, and aiding and abetting tortious acts, and sought a
declaratory judgment that plaintiffs were the rightful owners of the
bank account and its contents.
¶ 6 Before plaintiffs discovered the lease payment’s theft and filed
their complete set of claims, the trial court granted a preliminary
injunction requiring the defendants to relinquish access to Mile Hi
Veterans’ Secretary of State filings. After plaintiffs filed an amended
complaint, the court granted their motion for summary judgment
on their declaratory judgment claim, concluding that plaintiffs —
not Moreno and the other defendants — were entitled to the Verizon
lease payment. Accordingly, the court ordered the lease payment,
which had been held in the court’s registry, to be released to
plaintiffs. The court granted summary judgment in favor of Moreno
on plaintiffs’ claims for conversion and tortious interference with
contract claims. After settling their claims against the other
defendants, plaintiffs proceeded to trial against Moreno and Mares
on plaintiffs’ claims for civil theft, COCCA violations, conspiracy,
and unauthorized assumption of corporate powers.
4
¶ 7 The jury found Moreno and Mares liable for civil theft and for
unauthorized assumption of corporate powers, but it awarded no
damages. It found defendants not liable for conspiracy or for
violating COCCA.
¶ 8 After trial, plaintiffs moved for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict, asserting that the jury failed to consider the undisputed
value of the lease payment when awarding damages. They argued
that they were entitled to treble that amount in actual damages, or
at least $200 in statutory damages. The trial court granted the
motion in part, awarding $200 in statutory damages but denying
the request for a higher damages award.
¶ 9 Moreno appeals and plaintiffs cross-appeal.
II. Standards of Review
¶ 10 When there are no disputed facts, we review the trial court’s
entry of summary judgment and judgment notwithstanding the
verdict de novo. Vaccaro v. Am. Fam. Ins. Grp., 2012 COA 9M, ¶ 40;
Beeftu v. Creekside Ventures LLC, 37 P.3d 526, 528 (Colo. App.
2001). We also apply de novo review to the court’s legal
conclusions, including those related to standing, whether the jury
was correctly instructed on the applicable law, and whether the
5
evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict,
sufficiently supports the jury’s decision. Ferguson v. Spalding
Rehab., LLC, 2019 COA 93, ¶ 7; Bedee v. Am. Med. Response of
Colo., 2015 COA 128, ¶ 9; Northstar Project Mgmt., Inc. v. DLR Grp.,
Inc., 2013 CO 12, ¶ 14.
¶ 11 When a C.R.C.P. 59 motion for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict involves disputed facts, we review the court’s ruling for an
abuse of discretion. Sch. Dist. No. 12 v. Sec. Life of Denver Ins. Co.,
185 P.3d 781, 786 (Colo. 2008). We also review the court’s
decisions on whether to grant leave to amend the pleadings or to
award costs and attorney fees for an abuse of discretion. Rinker v.
Colina-Lee, 2019 COA 45, ¶ 28; Archer v. Farmer Bros. Co., 90 P.3d
228, 230 (Colo. 2004). A court abuses its discretion when its
decision is manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair, or when it
misinterprets or misapplies the law. Rinker, ¶ 29.
III. Moreno’s Arguments on Appeal
¶ 12 Moreno challenges multiple decisions by the trial court,
including its award of damages notwithstanding the verdict and
entry of partial summary judgment on plaintiffs’ declaratory
judgment claim. She also argues the court erred by concluding that
6
she lacked standing, denying her motion to assert counterclaims,
and instructing the jury that it had predetermined certain elements
of civil theft. Finally, she challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
and asserts that she is entitled to costs and fees for prevailing on
plaintiffs’ COCCA claim. Considering each of Moreno’s arguments
in turn, we discern no basis for relief.
A. Preservation and Compliance with C.A.R. 28
¶ 13 As an initial matter, we note that Moreno’s opening brief does
not comply with C.A.R. 28(a)(7)(A), which requires an appellant to
point us to the precise location in the record where each issue was
raised and where the trial court ruled. This rule’s purpose “is to
relieve courts from the burden of having to search records to
determine whether (and, if so, how) issues [have] been raised and
resolved in the trial courts.” O’Quinn v. Baca, 250 P.3d 629, 631
(Colo. App. 2010). We expect counsel to comply with the appellate
rules, and we are under no obligation to search the record to
determine whether each issue was properly preserved. Id. at 631-
32. But having reviewed the record, and even giving Moreno the
benefit of the doubt where preservation is unclear, we are still not
persuaded by the merits on any of her arguments.
7
B. Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict
¶ 14 Moreno argues the trial court erred by awarding plaintiffs
$200 in statutory damages, notwithstanding the jury’s decision to
award no actual damages, because there was no legal basis for
doing so. She supports her argument with a single sentence,
asserting that the court “did not make any determination that the
jury verdict was unreasonable in any way.”
¶ 15 Moreno’s contention is not supported by the record and does
not address the actual grounds relied upon by the trial court. In a
thorough written order, the court determined that plaintiffs were
entitled to statutory damages under section 18-4-405, C.R.S. 2023.
That statute provides that a plaintiff “may recover two hundred
dollars or three times the amount of the actual damages sustained
by him, whichever is greater, and may also recover costs of the
action and reasonable attorney fees.” § 18-4-405. The court also
noted that the jury ignored Instruction No. 17, which provided, “If
you find in favor of the Plaintiffs, but do not award any actual
damages, you shall award the plaintiff statutory damages in the
amount of $200.”
8
¶ 16 Moreno does not address section 18-4-405 or acknowledge
Instruction No. 17 in her opening brief. Nor does she explain how
the cases she cites support her position. And while she argues that
plaintiffs waived any objection to the jury instructions because they
tendered them to the trial court, plaintiffs do not challenge the jury
instructions. Their motion for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict was based on their position that the jury instructions were
appropriate, but that the jury ignored them. Because Moreno bases
her argument on “a bald legal proposition presented without
argument or development,” we will not consider it further. Barnett
v. Elite Props. of Am., Inc., 252 P.3d 14, 19 (Colo. App. 2010).
Instead, we conclude the court properly awarded statutory
damages, as required under section 18-4-405.
C. Summary Judgment
¶ 17 In granting summary judgment on plaintiffs’ declaratory
judgment claim, the trial court resolved the primary dispute in this
case as a matter of law. Specifically, it concluded that Mile Hi
Veterans was the same legal entity as the one that originally
entered into the lease agreement with Verizon. And it found no
authority to suggest that a corporate entity loses its rights under a
9
lease agreement simply because it changes its entity name. So the
court concluded that plaintiffs were the sole parties entitled to the
Verizon lease payment. It also concluded that Moreno and the
other defendants lacked standing to assert any rights or arguments
related to the lease agreement because they were not parties to it.
Finally, the court declined Moreno’s request for additional
discovery, noting that the question of the lease payment “has no
factual dispute and is solely a question of law.”
¶ 18 Moreno argues the court erred by granting partial summary
judgment. However, as with her arguments regarding the entry of
judgment notwithstanding the verdict, she fails to address the
substance of the court’s ruling. Specifically, she asserts that
summary judgment was improper because plaintiffs failed to join
necessary parties — namely Verizon and AGIF — to the action. But
the trial court concluded that Moreno lacked standing to assert
rights under the lease agreement because she was not a party to
the lease. As discussed in greater detail below, we are unpersuaded
that the trial court erred when it determined that Moreno lacked
standing. And because we conclude that the court’s determination
that she lacked standing to enforce the lease agreement is affirmed,
10
such a ruling prevents her from now arguing that Verizon and AGIF
should have been added as parties to the related declaratory
judgment action.
¶ 19 Moreno also points to evidence that Verizon never changed the
lease agreement payee to Mile Hi Veterans, but she does not explain
how this evidence negates the trial court’s summary judgment. And
she cites no authority to undermine the court’s finding, as a matter
of law, that a corporation retains its rights after a change in
corporate name, and we have found none. To the contrary, “[t]he
change of a corporation’s name is not a change of the identity of a
corporation and has no effect on the corporation’s property, rights,
or liabilities.” Alley v. Miramon, 614 F.2d 1372, 1384 (5th Cir.
1980); see also 18 C.J.S. Corporations § 143, Westlaw (database
updated May 2024) (collecting cases).
¶ 20 Despite Moreno’s arguments, whether Verizon and AGIF were
named parties to the action and whether Mile Hi Veterans
successfully changed its designation in the lease agreement have no
bearing on the trial court’s decision to grant partial summary
judgment to plaintiffs. Accordingly, we conclude that Moreno is not
11
entitled to relief, and we reject her challenge to the preliminary
injunction entered by the trial court on the same grounds.
D. Standing
¶ 21 The trial court also denied Moreno’s motion for reconsideration
and her motion for leave to amend her counterclaims because she
lacked standing to assert those claims. Moreno argues the court’s
standing determination was improper because she has been a
member of AGIF since 1996 and because she is a party to this case
who is alleged to have stolen the lease payment. We are not
persuaded.
¶ 22 Standing is a jurisdictional prerequisite that requires a named
plaintiff to bring suit only to protect a cognizable interest. Durdin v.
Cheyenne Mountain Bank, 98 P.3d 899, 902 (Colo. App. 2004). A
person who is not a party to an agreement generally lacks standing
to enforce that agreement. See Vallagio at Inverness Residential
Condo. Ass’n v. Metro. Homes, Inc., 2015 COA 65, ¶ 51, aff’d, 2017
CO 69. While a third-party beneficiary may sometimes seek to
enforce a contract, they may do so only if the original parties
intended to confer a benefit on the third party when contracting.
Id. at ¶ 52 (“While the intent to benefit the nonparty need not be
12
expressly recited in the contract, the intent must be apparent from
the terms of the agreement, the surrounding circumstances, or
both.” (quoting Harwig v. Downey, 56 P.3d 1220, 1221 (Colo. App.
2002))).
¶ 23 Moreno does not raise a meritorious challenge to the trial
court’s determination that Mile Hi Veterans was the same entity
formerly known as the Mile Hi Chapter. Therefore, Mile Hi Veterans
was the entity described in the lease agreement with Verizon, albeit
under its former name. Even if Moreno was a member of the Mile
Hi Chapter when it entered the lease agreement with Verizon, she
was not a member when the lease payment at issue in this case
became due. Also, the lease agreement was between Verizon and
the corporate entity itself, not its members.
¶ 24 Moreno points to no language in the lease agreement or any
surrounding circumstances indicating that Verizon and Mile Hi
Veterans intended for the lease agreement to benefit Mile Hi
Veterans members, let alone former Mile Hi Chapter members. See
1996) (“[I]t is not enough that some benefit incidental to the
performance of the contract may accrue to the third party.”). And
13
simply being named as a defendant in plaintiffs’ attempt to reclaim
the stolen lease payment does not give Moreno a legal right to
enforce an agreement to which she is not a party. Vallagio, ¶ 51.
So we conclude the trial court properly determined that she lacked
standing.
E. Counterclaims
1. Additional Facts
¶ 25 Two and a half months before trial, Moreno filed a motion for
leave to file counterclaims against plaintiffs for breach of contract
(related to Mile Hi Veterans’ alleged breach of the AGIF constitution)
and abuse of process. The trial court denied the motion,
concluding that Moreno had previously filed and then voluntarily
dismissed counterclaims that were “almost verbatim.” The court
noted that Moreno’s motion was filed on the last day permitted to
amend the pleadings and that Moreno failed to adequately explain
why she had not brought the amended claims earlier. It further
found that Moreno’s counterclaims would be futile because
(1) Moreno lacked standing to assert a claim based on the AGIF
constitution, and (2) the court could not find any plausible abuse of
process by plaintiffs based on Moreno’s allegations.
14
2. Discussion
¶ 26 Moreno contends that the trial court abused its discretion
because her counterclaims were previously dismissed without
prejudice, so she should have been entitled to bring them again.
She also argues that she timely reasserted her counterclaims based
on the deadline set forth by the court’s case management order.
Plaintiffs argue this issue is decidedly unpreserved because Moreno
did not file a reply to their detailed motion in opposition.
¶ 27 As an initial matter, we disagree with plaintiffs that Moreno’s
arguments are not preserved simply because she did not file a reply
to their response. Even if it was not as detailed as plaintiffs’
response, Moreno’s motion for leave to amend the pleadings by
adding counterclaims presented “the sum and substance” of her
arguments to the trial court. See Gebert v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
2023 COA 107, ¶ 25 (standard for preservation).
¶ 28 Even so, we discern no error. Importantly, Moreno does not
challenge the court’s alternate grounds for denying her motion. She
asserts the court erred by determining that her counterclaims were
untimely, but she makes no argument regarding the court’s
separate conclusion that her counterclaims would be futile.
15
“Ordinarily, a party’s failure to present a cogent argument
contesting a court’s alternative basis for judgment requires us to
affirm the judgment.” Lawson v. Stow, 2014 COA 26, ¶ 41.
¶ 29 We also disagree with Moreno’s arguments that her
counterclaims were not prejudicial. While leave to amend a
pleading is generally freely given, it may be denied based on undue
prejudice to the opposing party. Sandoval v. Archdiocese of Denver,
8 P.3d 598, 605 (Colo. App. 2000). Whether a petition to amend a
pleading is timely or not, “[t]he movant carries the burden of
demonstrating that lack of knowledge, mistake, inadvertence, or
other reason for having not stated the amended claim earlier.” Id.
¶ 30 Moreno does not explain why she sought to reassert
counterclaims that she had previously dismissed, or why she waited
to reassert those claims until the last possible day to do so. She
also does not challenge the court’s finding that plaintiffs would be
prejudiced by a likely continuance of trial and need for additional
discovery. See Fisher v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 2015 COA
57, ¶ 18 (we decline to address conclusory arguments). We
conclude that reversal is not warranted.
16
F. Predetermination of Elements of Civil Theft
¶ 31 Based on its summary judgment, the trial court gave the
following instruction to the jury at the end of trial:
I have already made certain factual and legal
determinations and have entered judgment on
certain aspect[s] of the parties[’] claims and
defenses. Those decisions make the
presentation of any evidence to prove these
matters unnecessary. Those decisions make
the presentation of any evidence to disprove
those matters irrelevant. You must accept the
following as true:
1. Plaintiff Mile Hi Veterans is the only party
with legal interest in and the legal right to
receive the $90,750.00 lease payment
from Verizon Wireless.
2. Defendants have no legal interest in the
$90,750.00 Verizon payment nor any
right to it;
3. Mile Hi Veteran[s’] decision to change its
corporate name from Mile Hi Chapter
American GI Forum of Colorado to Mile
Hi Veterans did not make Mile Hi
Veterans a new entity and it did not affect
Mile Hi Veterans’ rights;
4. The entity previously known as American
GI Forum Mile Hi Chapter and the
Plaintiff Mile Hi Veterans are the exact
same legal entity and [the FEIN number
as well as the Colorado Corporate Entity
number belonging to the Mile Hi Chapter]
both belong to Plaintiff Mile Hi Veterans;
17
5. Defendants are not a corporation or
formal business entity; and
6. Defendants did not have any legal
authority to use Mile Hi Veterans[’ FEIN]
or Colorado Corporate Entity Number.
¶ 32 Moreno contends the court’s instruction was improper. She
asserts that each of the findings described in it was factually
disputed, particularly because plaintiffs had the burden of proving
that she had a criminal mental state at the time that she opened a
bank account using Mile Hi Veterans’ FEIN number and received
the lease payment. She argues that the court’s instructions
deprived her of the right to have the jury decide whether she had
the culpable mens rea required for civil theft. We disagree.
3
¶ 33 As we have discussed, the court determined that plaintiffs
were entitled to the lease payment because Mile Hi Veterans was
the same entity initially described in the lease agreement. Because
Moreno points to no record evidence or legal authority to refute this
3
Despite plaintiffs’ arguments to the contrary, we conclude this
issue was preserved. Moreno did not specifically raise the issue of
mens rea during the jury instruction conference, but she objected
to the court’s legal determination that plaintiffs were the rightful
owners of the lease payment. We therefore address this issue’s
merits.
18
determination, we conclude that whether Mile Hi Veterans was
entitled to the lease payment was indeed a legal question.
¶ 34 To be sure, the jury was required to find that Moreno acted
with criminal intent in order to convict her of civil theft. See § 18-4-
401, C.R.S. 2023 (a person commits theft when she knowingly
obtains anything of value of another without authorization). But
Moreno was permitted to present evidence of her mens rea to the
jury. Over plaintiffs’ objection, she testified that she did not believe
that she was trying to take anything that belonged to the original
AGIF Mile Hi Chapter, and that she believed that the “renewed” Mile
Hi Chapter was entitled to the lease payment.
¶ 35 The jury was also properly instructed on the elements of civil
theft, including that the jury was required to find by a
preponderance of the evidence that Moreno acted with the requisite
intent. These instructions required the jury to find that Moreno
“knowingly, without authorization or by deception, obtained or
exercised control over the Verizon Lease Payment” and that she “did
so with the intent to permanently deprive the Plaintiff(s) of the use
or benefit of the Verizon Lease Payment.” So even though the court
instructed the jury that Moreno was not entitled to the lease
19
payment, the jury was required to find that Moreno acted with
criminal intent. Moreno presented evidence to contradict that
finding, but the jury still found that the civil theft elements were
met. Because the jury was properly instructed on the law and — as
discussed in greater detail below — there was evidence to support
its verdict, we will not disturb it.
G. Sufficiency of the Evidence
¶ 36 Moreno next contends there was insufficient evidence to
support her civil theft conviction because there was no evidence
that Verizon or its subcontractor determined that Mile Hi Veterans
was the correct recipient of the lease payment. She argues the
court’s later legal determination that Mile Hi Veterans was entitled
to the lease payment cannot be imputed to her. She also challenges
the sufficiency of the evidence regarding unauthorized assumption
of corporate powers, arguing there was no evidence that she acted
on behalf of Mile Hi Veterans because she always represented
herself as part of the Mile Hi Chapter.
¶ 37 At the outset, we question whether Moreno properly preserved
this issue for appeal. At the close of trial, she moved for a directed
verdict on plaintiffs’ COCCA claim and other claims brought by Mile
20
Hi Veterans Services. But she did not move for a directed verdict on
plaintiffs’ civil theft claim, and her attorney specifically
acknowledged that “there has been evidence of activities that could
fit the definition of civil theft, I believe, under the law.” Also,
Moreno did not move for a directed verdict regarding the charge of
unauthorized assumption of corporate powers. Cf. In re Estate of
Chavez, 2022 COA 89M, ¶ 33 (post-trial motion preserved
sufficiency of the evidence challenge for appeal).
¶ 38 Even if we assume that Moreno’s sufficiency of the evidence
challenge is properly before us, “[a] jury’s verdict will not be
disturbed if there is any support for it in the record.” Blood v.
Qwest Servs. Corp., 224 P.3d 301, 325 (Colo. App. 2009) (quoting
Murphy v. Glenn, 964 P.2d 581, 584 (Colo. App. 1998)), aff’d, 252
P.3d 1071 (Colo. 2011). Plaintiffs presented evidence that Moreno
encouraged Lopez to file changes to Mile Hi Veterans’ entity name
and registered agent with the Colorado Secretary of State; sent
meeting minutes purportedly from that entity (with a new name) to
the bank where she proceeded to open a corporate account; and
sent a letter to Verizon claiming to be the Interim Chairwoman of
“one and the same organization” that received the original FEIN in
21
1968. As discussed above, the trial court also properly instructed
the jury that, as a legal matter, Mile Hi Veterans was the only entity
entitled to the lease payment. But even without that instruction,
the jury heard evidence, and plaintiffs’ attorney emphasized during
closing argument, that when an entity changes its name, it does not
lose its rights.
¶ 39 Viewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, see
Northstar Project Mgmt., ¶ 14, we conclude the relevant evidence
was sufficient to support the jury’s verdicts.
H. Failure to Award Fees and Costs
¶ 40 Finally, we reject Moreno’s claim to attorney fees and costs as
a prevailing party under COCCA’s fee-shifting provision. Section
18-17-106(7), C.R.S. 2023, entitles “[a]ny person injured by reason
of” a COCCA violation to attorney fees and costs of investigation
and litigation. (Emphasis added.) It says nothing of a defendant
who is found not liable under COCCA.
¶ 41 Moreno also argues that she was a prevailing party as to “the
large majority of other claims” involved in this litigation and is
therefore entitled to fees. “When a case involves many claims, some
of which are successful and some of which are not, it is left to the
22
sole discretion of the trial court to determine which party, if any, is
the prevailing party and whether costs should be awarded.” Archer,
and contention” of the parties’ dispute was the control over the
corporate entity of Mile Hi Veterans, the lease payment, and
whether it was stolen by defendants. Because plaintiffs prevailed
on all three of these substantive issues, we conclude the court
properly exercised its discretion to determine that plaintiffs were the
prevailing parties.
IV. Plaintiffs’ Cross-Appeal
¶ 42 We next consider plaintiffs’ cross-appeal. Plaintiffs contend
that while the trial court properly granted their motion for judgment
notwithstanding the verdict, it improperly limited its damages
award to $200. Plaintiffs argue that they are entitled to treble the
value of the lease payment, plus pre- and post-judgment interest,
under section 18-4-405. We conclude that the record supports the
trial court’s exercise of discretion.
¶ 43 As discussed, the trial court instructed the jury that Moreno
had “no legal interest in the $90,750.00 Verizon payment.”
Regarding the elements of civil theft, the court also instructed the
23
jury that plaintiffs had an ownership interest in the lease payment.
And it instructed that, in awarding damages, the jury was required
to consider the stolen property’s value among the economic losses
that plaintiffs suffered as a result of the civil theft.
¶ 44 We recognize that, at first blush, the jury’s decision to find
Moreno liable for civil theft but to award $0 in damages is peculiar
in a case where the stolen property’s value was undisputed.
Critically, however, the trial court specifically instructed the jury
that it was entitled to do what it did. In Instruction No. 10, the
court instructed,
The fact that an instruction on measure of
damages has been given to you does not mean
that the Court is instructing the jury to award
or not to award damages. The question of
whether or not damages are to be awarded is a
question for the jury’s consideration.
¶ 45 That is, while the jury was instructed on the stolen property’s
value, it was also properly instructed — with no objection by either
party — that it was entitled to find liability for civil damages without
awarding damages at all. Its ability to do so was further
underscored by Instruction No. 17, which instructed the jury to
24
award $200 in statutory damages if it found “in favor of the
Plaintiffs, but [did] not award actual damages.”
¶ 46 Considering these instructions, we conclude this case is
distinguishable from the primary cases on which plaintiffs rely. In
Mystic Tailoring Co. v. Jacobstein, 94 Colo. 306, 308, 30 P.2d 263,
264 (1934), the trial court awarded damages beyond the jury’s
verdict because they were undisputed and “there [was] nothing
further to try.” By contrast here, while the stolen property’s value
was undisputed, whether plaintiffs proved actual damages was a
question properly for the jury’s determination. And this is not a
case like Cole v. Angerman, 31 Colo. App. 279, 282, 501 P.2d 136,
138 (1972), where “the jury . . . failed to follow the instructions.” To
the contrary, the jury was instructed that the court’s
predetermination of the stolen property’s value was not an
instruction to award or not award damages.
¶ 47 The question the jury submitted to the court during
deliberations does not require a different conclusion. Specifically,
the jury asked, “Has the $90,750 been returned to the plaintiffs[?]
If we want to ensure that the $90,750 is returned to Plaintiffs, do
we need to note the total amount of Plaintiff damages[?]”
25
¶ 48 Plaintiffs argue this question evidences the jury’s confusion
and its desire to award the lease payment as actual damages. But
reading the jury’s question as plaintiffs suggest would require us to
speculate that the jury wanted to award damages as a way to
ensure the $90,750 was returned to plaintiffs. The record just as
easily supports the conclusion that the jury declined to award
damages because the money was already returned, or because it
heeded the court’s instructions and concluded actual damages had
not been proved at trial. Also, the trial court properly informed the
jury that it had all the evidence it could consider and that “[r]eturn
of the money is not a defense to civil theft.” As plaintiffs’ attorney
appeared to concede at a bench conference, this answer accurately
informed the jury of the governing law.
4
See Chavez, ¶ 48 (the fact
that stolen property was eventually returned is not a defense).
4
Plaintiffs’ attorney stated that the court’s proposed answer to the
jury’s question “is not only responsive to the jury but also an
inaccurate statement of the law. So it’s timeless.” In context, it
appears the transcript may contain a typographical error, and he
was recognizing the court’s answer as accurate. But even if counsel
disagreed, the court was correct that “returning funds . . . is not a
defense to civil theft.” In re Estate of Chavez, 2022 COA 89M, ¶ 48.
26
¶ 49 In denying plaintiffs’ request for a damages award beyond
$200, the trial court found it “clear . . . that the jury did decide that
[Moreno was] liable for civil theft. They just did not decide that
Plaintiffs suffered any actual damages nor that Plaintiffs proved
their damages.” Because it is supported by the instructions given
to the jury, we cannot conclude the court’s conclusion was
arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair. See Rinker, ¶ 29. Accordingly,
we must affirm the court’s decision.
V. Appellate Attorney Fees and Costs
¶ 50 Finally, we conclude that plaintiffs are entitled to reasonable
appellate attorney fees under the civil theft statute. § 18-4-405; see
also Tisch v. Tisch, 2019 COA 41, ¶ 93. Exercising our discretion
under C.A.R. 39.1, we remand the case to the trial court to
determine and award those fees. C.A.R. 39.1; see also Black v.
Black, 2018 COA 7, ¶ 130.
VI. Disposition
¶ 51 The judgment is affirmed, and the case is remanded to the
trial court to determine and award plaintiffs’ appellate attorney fees.
JUDGE JOHNSON and JUDGE GRAHAM concur.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.