Davenport v. Parrot ( 2024 )


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  • 23CA1034 Davenport v Parrott 07-11-2024
    COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
    Court of Appeals No. 23CA1034
    Larimer County District Court No. 22CV30471
    Honorable Joseph D. Findley, Judge
    Benjamin E. Davenport and Kirk A. Smith,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    Phillip A. Parrott and Campbell Killin Brittan & Ray, LLC, a Colorado limited
    liability company,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
    Division VI
    Opinion by JUDGE BERNARD*
    Lipinsky and Schutz, JJ., concur
    NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
    Announced July 11, 2024
    Daniel W. Alexander, PLLC, Daniel W. Alexander, Fort Collins, Colorado, for
    Plaintiffs-Appellants
    Campbell, Wagner & Frazier, LLC, Colin C. Campbell, Greenwood Village,
    Colorado; Bruno, Colin & Lowe P.C., Heidi Hugdahl, Denver, Colorado;
    Campbell Killin Brittan & Ray, LLC, Bruce E. Rohde, Denver, Colorado for
    Defendants-Appellees
    *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 Plaintiffs, Benjamin E. Davenport and Kirk A. Smith, to whom
    we will refer collectively as “the officers,” appeal the trial court’s
    decision to grant a summary judgment motion filed by defendants,
    Phillip A. Parrott, to whom we will refer as “the lawyer,” and
    Campbell, Killin, Brittan & Ray, LLC, to which we will refer as “the
    law firm.” We affirm.
    I. Background
    ¶ 2 In 2012, Mr. Davenport was the president and Mr. Smith was
    the chief financial officer of a limited liability company called Blue
    Point Pellets, LLC. Blue Point Pellets was a subsidiary of a limited
    liability company called Blue Ocean Holdings, LLC. Three years
    later, the officers resigned their positions.
    ¶ 3 In 2016, Blue Ocean hired an investigator to look into “the
    financial affairs and business operations” of Blue Point Pellets.
    ¶ 4 About a year into the investigation, the investigator contacted
    the lawyer, who was working at the law firm, and asked him for
    input into the investigator’s proposed final report. The investigator
    sought his advice because he had once served as a chief deputy
    district attorney in charge of the Denver District Attorney’s
    Economic Crime Unit. The investigator wanted him to read the
    2
    proposed final report, to offer recommendations about which
    criminal law statutes might apply to the officers’ conduct, and to
    participate in a conference call with the leadership of Blue Ocean.
    ¶ 5 After the conference call, Blue Ocean contacted the District
    Attorney’s Office in the Eighth Judicial District to report the officers’
    alleged criminal conduct. The investigator and the lawyer then
    attended an in-person meeting with the elected district attorney to
    discuss the report. The lawyer offered to serve as a special deputy
    district attorney in any criminal case that might be filed against the
    officers.
    ¶ 6 According to the complaint, the lawyer was appointed to serve
    as a special deputy district attorney in November 2017. But, at the
    time of his appointment, the lawyer was apparently ineligible to
    serve as a special deputy under section 20-1-201(c), C.R.S. 2023,
    because he did not meet all the statutory requirements. Eventually,
    the district attorney’s office realized this mistake, and, in 2018, the
    lawyer was appointed to serve as a part-time deputy district
    attorney. Working in that capacity, the lawyer helped to present
    evidence to a grand jury. In a thirty-one-count indictment, the
    grand jury indicted the officers.
    3
    ¶ 7 In July 2019, the officers asked the court presiding over the
    criminal case to disqualify the lawyer from serving as part-time
    deputy district attorney. The court denied this motion, as well as
    an amended motion asking it to reconsider its decision to deny the
    original motion. The court also denied the officers’ request to call
    the lawyer as a defense witness.
    ¶ 8 The officers eventually each pled guilty to a single felony
    count. The court sentenced them to jail for ninety days, placed
    them on probation for ten years, and ordered them to pay
    restitution.
    ¶ 9 On July 17, 2022, the officers filed the complaint in this case
    against the lawyer and the law firm, claiming that the lawyer had
    committed the tort of abuse of process and that the law firm, via the
    doctrine of respondeat superior, was also liable for that tort. The
    attorney and the law firm asked the trial court to dismiss the
    complaint.
    ¶ 10 The court granted the motion to dismiss. As is pertinent to
    our analysis, the court decided that the officers had not timely filed
    their complaint under section 13-80-102(1)(a), C.R.S. 2023, which
    requires parties to file abuse of process claims within two years of
    4
    when the cause of action accrues. In other words, the court
    decided that the officers’ abuse of process claim was barred by the
    statute of limitations.
    II. Statute of Limitations
    A. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
    ¶ 11 We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss de novo.
    Hurtado v. Brady, 165 P.3d 871, 873 (Colo. App. 2007). A statute of
    limitations issue may be decided as a matter of law “where it is
    shown that the plaintiff discovered, or reasonably should have
    discovered, the alleged tortious conduct as of a particular date.”
    Colburn v. Kopit, 59 P.3d 295, 297 (Colo. App. 2002).
    ¶ 12 Tort actions for abuse of process “must be commenced within
    two years after the cause of action accrues.” § 13-80-102(1)(a).
    Such a claim accrues on the date when the plaintiff knew or should
    have known by the exercise of due diligence that the alleged abuse
    of process occurred. § 13-80-108(1), C.R.S. 2023; see also Colburn,
    B. Analysis
    ¶ 13 The complaint raises two claims.
    5
    ¶ 14 The first is that the lawyer committed the tort of abuse of
    process by “influenc[ing], induc[ing], and causing” the district
    attorney’s office to
    “[i]mpanel a [g]rand [jury] to pursue indictments” against
    the officers;
    “[u]nlawfully appoint” the lawyer as a special prosecutor;
    and
    “[i]mproperly appoint” the lawyer to be the “de facto lead
    prosecutor before the grand jury . . . to consider criminal
    indictments based on the . . . same alleged conduct” that
    the lawyer had told the district attorney was “criminal
    conduct while acting in a private capacity on behalf of the
    alleged victims.”
    ¶ 15 Once the lawyer became the “de facto lead prosecutor,” this
    claim continued, he “continued to exploit and abuse this position to
    pursue criminal indictments against” the officers, “irrespective of a
    lack of evidence [to] . . . fulfill his ulterior purposes of using the
    criminal process to enrich himself and others, either directly or
    indirectly.”
    6
    ¶ 16 The second claim alleges that the law firm was responsible for
    the lawyer’s alleged abuse of process under the doctrine of
    respondeat superior.
    ¶ 17 Our review of the record indicates that the officers were aware
    of the material facts on which they based the two claims more than
    two years before they filed their lawsuit on July 17, 2022. As we
    noted above, on July 19, 2019, they asked the court presiding over
    the criminal case to disqualify the lawyer from his position as a
    part-time deputy district attorney. In that motion, they argued that
    the lawyer was acting as an agent of the crime’s victim — Blue
    Ocean because he had been paid by the investigator, who had, in
    turn, been hired by Blue Ocean, when he met with the elected
    district attorney. They wrote that the lawyer “has acted directly in
    the employ of an alleged victim here and then participated in
    discussions with law enforcement about the criminal charges and
    thereafter was appointed to prosecute this matter.”
    ¶ 18 The officers contend that they could not have discovered the
    nature of the lawyer’s prior involvement and conduct until July 17,
    2020, when they received invoices from the law firm. They then
    assert that the invoices from the law firm revealed that the lawyer
    7
    actively asked to become a special prosecutor while he was still
    working for Blue Ocean. But the motion to disqualify made the
    same point, as reflected in the language from the motion to
    disqualify the lawyer that we quoted in the preceding paragraph.
    ¶ 19 Accordingly, we conclude that the record supports the trial
    court’s decision to dismiss the officers’ claims against the lawyer
    and against the law firm because their lawsuit was filed after the
    statute of limitations had run.
    ¶ 20 Next, the officers ask us to vacate the trial court’s order
    awarding attorney fees and costs to the law firm. The officers do
    not develop this contention, so we will not address it. See Holley v.
    Huang, 284 P.3d 81, 87 (Colo. App. 2011).
    ¶ 21 Last, relying on C.A.R. 39.1, the lawyer and the law firm ask
    us to award them appellate attorney fees and costs. They say that
    the officers’ appeal was frivolous as filed because it did not “present
    any rational legal argument” and that it was frivolous as argued
    because the officers based their contentions on “egregious and
    demonstrably false statements.” We decline this request for the
    following reasons.
    8
    ¶ 22 Focusing on the sole issue that we have resolved in this appeal
    the officers’ contention that their claims were not barred by the
    statute of limitations we conclude that the appeal was not
    frivolous as filed because we cannot say that the trial court’s ruling
    was “so plainly correct and the legal authority contrary to [the
    officers’] position so clear that there [was] really no appealable
    issue.” See Castillo v. Koppes-Conway, 148 P.3d 289, 292 (Colo.
    App. 2006)(quoting Dungaree Realty, Inc. v. United States, 30 F.3d
    122, 124 (Fed. Cir. 1994)). And we conclude that the appeal was
    not frivolous as argued because, again zeroing in on the statute of
    limitations issue, we cannot say that the officers “commit[ted]
    misconduct in arguing the appeal.” See Martin v. Essrig, 277 P.3d
    857, 862 (Colo. App. 2011).
    ¶ 23 The judgment is affirmed.
    JUDGE LIPINSKY and JUDGE SCHUTZ concur.

Document Info

Docket Number: 23CA1034

Filed Date: 7/11/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/17/2024