HomeMy WebLinkAbout2018CV172 - Stacy Lynne V. The City Of Fort Collins; Darin Atteberry; Carrie Daggett; Christopher Van Hall - 036 - Defendants' Response To Plaintiff's Rule 60 Motion And Defendants' Request For Award Of Attorney's FeesDISTRICT COURT, LARIMER COUNTY, COLORADO
Larimer County Justice Center
201 Laporte Avenue, Suite 100
Fort Collins, CO 80521-2761
(970) 498-6100
Plaintiff: STACY LYNNE
v.
Defendant: THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS; DARIN
ATTEBERRY; CARRIE DAGGETT;
CHRISTOPHER HALL
COURT USE ONLY
Kimberly B. Schutt, #25947
WICK & TRAUTWEIN, LLC
P.O. Box 2166
Fort Collins, CO 80522
Phone: (970) 482-4011
Email: kschutt@wicklaw.com
John R. Duval, #10185
FORT COLLINS CITY ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
P.O. Box 580
Fort Collins, CO 80522
Phone: (970) 221-6520
Email: jduval@fcgov.com
Case Number: 2018 C 172
Courtroom: 4C
DEFENDANTS’ RESPONSE TO PLAINTIFF’S
RULE 60 MOTION; and DEFENDANTS’ REQUEST
FOR AWARD OF ATTORNEY’S FEES
COMES NOW, the Defendants, City of Fort Collins (“City”), Darin Atteberry, Carrie
Daggett and Christopher Hall, by and through their counsel, the Fort Collins City Attorney’s
Office and Wick & Trautwein, LLC, and respectfully submit the following response to what
Plaintiff has labeled a motion made pursuant to C.R.C.P. 60. Defendants further request the
Court sanction Plaintiff and award them their attorney’s fees incurred in responding to this
frivolous, groundless and vexatious motion. In support thereof, the Defendants state as follows:
1. Plaintiff brought this action under the Colorado Open Records Act (CORA”),
C.R.S. §24-72-201, et seq. contending that the City unlawfully denied her full access to certain
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public records and denied her a detailed privilege log of the documents withheld by the City on
the grounds of attorney-client privilege. The City denied the allegations and asserted that it
properly withheld certain documents in response to Plaintiff’s CORA request, consistent with the
exception for items protected by attorney-client privilege under C.R.S. §24-72-204(3)(a)(IV).
The City also denied that CORA required compilation of a detailed log for items withheld from
production pursuant to this privilege.
2. The Court held a hearing in the matter on October 1, 2018, taking several hours of
testimony from the seven witnesses called by the Plaintiff, in addition to her own testimony.1
The Court thereafter issued a detailed 12-page order on October 11, 2018, finding that the City
properly withheld the documents on grounds of attorney-client privilege and rejecting the
Plaintiff’s claims that she was entitled to a detailed privilege log. The Court’s order was well-
reasoned, supported by the controlling legal authority cited therein and by the testimony given at
the hearing.
3. The Plaintiff did not file a motion to amend the findings/judgment or for a new
trial within the 14 days required by C.R.C.P. 59. Nor did the Plaintiff file an appeal of the order
within 49 days, as required by C.A.R. 4. Rather, more than 4 months after the entry of judgment,
she has filed what she labels as a Rule 60(b)(2) motion seeking a new hearing on grounds of
1 Specifically, the Plaintiff subpoenaed testimony from six employees of the City of Fort Collins, including
Defendant City Manager Darin Atteberry; Defendant City Attorney Carrie Daggett; Defendant Assistant City
Attorney Christopher Van Hall; Boards and Commissions Coordinator Christine Macrina; Noah Beals, Senior City
Planner; Laurie Kadrich, Director of Planning, Development and Transportation; and Tom Leeson, the Director of
Community Services and Neighborhood Development. The Plaintiff also subpoenaed the testimony of Jeremy Call
of Logan Simpson.
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alleged fraud, misrepresentation or other misconduct of an adverse party. For the reasons
discussed further below, the motion is improper and wholly without merit, justifying not only
denial, but also a finding that it is frivolous, groundless and vexatious so as to warrant sanctions
against the Plaintiff.
4. Rule 60(b) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
“On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or his legal
representative from a final judgment, order or proceeding for the following reasons: (1)
Mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect; (2) fraud…misrepresentation, or
other misconduct of an adverse party; or (5) any other reason justifying relief from the
operation of the judgment.”
5. It is well-established that the party seeking relief under this rule has the high
burden of establishing the grounds for relief from judgment by “clear, strong, and satisfactory
proof.” Justi v. Rho Condominium Ass’n, 277 P.3d 847, 851 (Coo. App. 2011); Sebastian v.
Douglas County, Colorado, 370 P.3d 175, 177-78 (Colo. App. 2013) (movant bears the burden
of establishing by clear and convincing evidence that the Rule 60(b) motion should be granted);
In re Goodman Associates, LLC v. WP Mountain Properties, LLC, 222 P.3d 310, 315 (Colo.
2010). Moreover, the decision whether to grant relief under the rule is committed to the court’s
sound discretion. Id., at 314; Sebastian, 277 P.3d at 851.
6. The Court would be exercising sound discretion here in denying the Plaintiff any
relief under Rule 60(b). In the first instance, as expressly stated in the rule, it is designed to
relieve the Plaintiff from a final judgment based upon the grounds set forth in the rule; it is not
designed to provide another opportunity to move for a new trial or hearing when the Plaintiff has
failed to seek such relief in a timely manner under Rule 59. The case cited by the Plaintiff,
Sharma v. Vigil, 967 P.2d 197 (Colo. App. 1998) does not stand for the proposition that Rule 60
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can be used as another means to obtain a new trial on the merits; rather, it simply states that a
trial court may hold an evidentiary hearing on the Rule 60 motion, if it decides there is a disputed
issue regarding the existence of fraud, misrepresentation or other grounds raised in the motion.
The Sharma court emphasized that such a hearing is not required on a Rule 60 motion; it is
simply discretionary if the court determines a hearing would assist it in reaching a just
determination of the issues raised in the motion. Id.
7. No such hearing is required here. Indeed, the Plaintiff has failed to adequately
articulate, let alone demonstrate with clear, strong and satisfactory proof, any grounds for relief
under the rule. Rather, the motion is comprised largely of unsupported and misguided
accusations against the court, defense counsel and the witnesses who testified at the hearing.
8. Further, as reflected in the Plaintiff’s motion, she has since filed another lawsuit
against two of the witnesses who testified at the hearing in this case, namely Noah Beals and
Jeremy Call, bringing claims of defamation against them. That case is currently pending before
Judge Stephen Jouard as Larimer County District Court Case No. 2018 CV 220. As the Court
may recall, Mr. Beals is an employee in the City’s Planning Department, and Mr. Call is an
employee of Logan Simpson, an independent contractor who provided consulting services to the
City in developing changes to its sign code. The Plaintiff’s motion, which mischaracterizes the
proceedings of October 1, 2018 in the first instance, seems to suggest that there was some
misrepresentation made at the hearing regarding Jeremy Call’s relationship to the City as an
independent consultant and the fact that communications he had with Mr. Beals and outside
counsel for the City for purpose of developing sign code provisions would be subject to the
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attorney-client privilege. Plaintiff’s accusations appear to be premised on the fact that Mr. Call
has separate legal counsel and insurance in the later defamation case she filed against him.
9. Plaintiff’s assertions are apparently based on a blind refusal to recognize the
distinction between Mr. Call’s participation in discussions about sign code revisions with
employees of the City and their outside counsel being subject to the City’s attorney-client
privilege for purposes of her CORA request, as supported by Alliance Const. Solutions, Inc. v.
Dept. of Corrections, 54 P.3d 861 (Colo. 2002)2
, and the separate legal issue of whether the City
has a contractual or other legal obligation to defend and indemnify him (as an employee of the
City’s independent contractor) against the Plaintiff’s defamation claims in her other lawsuit.
10. Plaintiff previously made similar assertions in the defamation action, and the City
filed the attached response (Exhibit 1 hereto3
) already clarifying this valid legal distinction for
her. Yet, without any effort to confer with defense counsel on this issue as required by Rule 121,
she filed this meritless Rule 60(b) motion making unsupported accusations of fraud,
misrepresentation and misconduct.
2 Plaintiff asserts on page 4 of her motion that defense counsel allegedly blurted out a citation to the Alliance case as
a last-minute attempt to react to an alleged waiver of attorney-client privilege by Jeremy Call and/or Noah Beals.
Plaintiff fails to produce any transcript from the hearing to support such an assertion. Suffice it to say that the
Defendants very much dispute the Plaintiff’s characterization of what occurred at the hearing, and deny that any
such waiver of the privilege occurred.
3 Defendant Beal’s Response to Plaintiff’s Case Status Report Regarding Service was filed in Larimer County
District Court Case No. 2018 CV 220 on January 24, 2019, and served upon the Plaintiff by email and U.S. Mail.
Exhibit 1 to that Response, which was a copy of this Court’s October 11th Order in this case, is not included here for
the sake of brevity, since that Order is already part of the record in this case.
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11. There is no other way to characterize the Plaintiff’s motion other than frivolous,
groundless and vexatious. Not only is it wholly lacking merit for the reasons set forth above, it is
most certainly “stubbornly litigious” and abusive. See, In re Estate of Becker, 68 P.3d 567,
569 (Colo. App. 2003) (“A vexatious claim or defense is one brought or maintained in bad faith.
Bad faith may include conduct that is arbitrary, vexatious, abusive, or stubbornly litigious, and it
may also include conduct that is aimed at unwarranted delay or is disrespectful of truth and
accuracy”). Indeed, Plaintiff has a long history of engaging in such relentless, abusive litigation
without underlying merit to her claims, as reflected in the February 7, 2019 appellate order in
Lynne v. Field, attached hereto as Exhibit 2. It is fully expected that the Plaintiff will
stubbornly continue going down these unwarranted legal rabbit holes, causing the City to incur
further attorney’s fees defending against her filings and draining the Court’s resources, unless
such conduct is sanctioned.
12. Accordingly, the Court must deny the Plaintiff’s request for relief under Rule 60
as being wholly without merit, and do so without holding a hearing; this would be a sound
exercise of the Court’s discretion here, given the Plaintiff’s complete failure to demonstrate
entitlement to the relief she is requesting by clear, strong and satisfactory proof. The Court
would also be properly exercising its discretion under C.R.S. §13-17-102 in awarding the City its
reasonable attorney’s fees incurred in defending this motion which clearly lacks substantial
justification. That statute provides, in pertinent part:
“(4) The court shall assess attorney fees if, upon the motion of any party or the court
itself, it finds that an attorney or party brought or defended an action, or any part thereof,
that lacked substantial justification or that the action, or any part thereof, was interposed
for delay or harassment or if it finds that an attorney or party unnecessarily expanded the
proceeding by other improper conduct… As used in this article, ‘lacked substantial
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justification’ means substantially frivolous, substantially groundless, or substantially
vexatious.” [Emphasis added].
13. It is a well-accepted tenet of statutory construction that the word “or” in a statute
is presumed to be used in the disjunctive sense. Armintrout v. People, 864 P.2d 576, 581-582
(Colo. 1993); Lombard v. Colorado Outdoor Educ. Center, 187 P.3d 565, 571 (Colo. 2008).
Thus, the Court need not make findings as to all three bases in order to justify an award of
attorney’s fees under the statute; a finding of any one of these criteria will support a conclusion
that an action or motion lacks substantial justification. See, e.g., Mitchell v. Ryder, 104 P.3d 316,
321 (Colo. App. 2004). Such a finding is certainly warranted here.
WHEREFORE, the Defendants respectfully request the Court summarily deny the
Plaintiff’s Rule 60 motion and award the Defendants their reasonable attorney’s fees and costs
related to the defense of this frivolous, groundless and vexatious motion. The Defendants can
submit an affidavit outlining the fees incurred within 10 days of this Court’s order providing for
such an award.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED this 21st
day of February, 2019.
WICK & TRAUTWEIN, LLC
By: s/Kimberly B. Schutt
Kimberly B. Schutt, #25947
Attorneys for Defendant
And
FORT COLLINS CITY ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
By: s/John R. Duval
John R. Duval, #10185
Attorneys for Defendant
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[This document was served electronically pursuant to C.R.C.P. 121 §1-26. The original
pleading signed by defense counsel is on file at the offices of Wick & Trautwein, LLC and the
Fort Collins City Attorney’s Office]
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CERTIFICATE OF ELECTRONIC FILING
The undersigned hereby certifies that a true and correct copy of the foregoing
DEFENDANTS’ RESPONSE TO PLAINTIFF’S RULE 60 MOTION; AND
DEFENDANT’S REQUEST FOR AWARD OF ATTORNEY’S FEES was filed via the
Colorado Courts E-Filing System and served this 21ST
day of February, 2019, on the following:
Stacy Lynne
305 W. Magnolia Street #282
Fort Collins, CO 80521
A courtesy copy was also emailed to Ms. Lynne at stacy_lynne@comcast.net
s/ Kimberly B. Schutt
[The original certificate of electronic filing signed by Kimberly B. Schutt is on file at Wick &
Trautwein, LLC)