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Harris V Stallings

24CA1543 Harris v Stallings 07-24-2025

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS


Court of Appeals No. 24CA1543
Larimer County District Court No. 22CV30740
Honorable C. Michelle Brinegar, Judge


David Harris,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Dustin Stallings; Premier Medical Corporation, a Colorado Corporation;
Lincare, Inc., a Delaware Corporation; Lincare Holdings, Inc., a Delaware
Corporation; and RCS Management Holdings Company, a Delaware
Corporation,

Defendants-Appellees.


          JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART,
               AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

                                 Division VI
                           Opinion by JUDGE TOW
                         Yun and Sullivan, JJ., concur

                 NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
                         Announced July 24, 2025


The Law Office of Sam Cannon, LLC, Sam Cannon, Megan McDonald, Fort
Collins, Colorado; Metier Law Firm, LLC, R. Todd Ingram, Michael W.
Chaloupka, Rebecca J. Fisher, Fort Collins, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellant

Montgomery Amatuzio Chase Bell Jones, LLP, Lori K. Bell, Taylor G. Ostrowski,
Denver, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees
¶1    Plaintiff, David Harris, appeals the judgment entered against

 defendants, Dustin Stallings, Premier Medical Corporation

 (Premier), and Lincare Holdings, Inc (Lincare).1 We will refer to

 Premier and Lincare collectively as “the employers.” We affirm the

 judgment in part, reverse it in part, and remand the case with

 instructions for further proceedings.

                           I.    Background

¶2    Harris was injured when Stallings, driving his employer’s

 truck, turned left in front of Harris against the light and their

 vehicles collided. Harris sued Stallings and various corporate

 entities he alleged were Stallings’s employers. His claims against

 the corporate entities were based on both vicarious liability as




 1 Harris originally sued two other corporate entities — Lincare, Inc.,

 and RCS Management Holdings Company (RCS). No judgment was
 entered against either of these entities. The claims against Lincare,
 Inc., were dismissed without prejudice by stipulation, and Harris’s
 later effort to reinstate those claims was rejected by the court, thus
 making the dismissal with prejudice. As to RCS, no evidence was
 presented at trial about that entity, and the jury was not asked to
 render any verdict on the claims against it. Those claims have
 therefore been abandoned. See Scott Wetzel Servs., Inc. v. Johnson,
 821 P.2d 804, 807-08 (Colo. 1991) (noting that the trial court’s
 having instructed on only one of several claims implicitly meant
 that the remaining claims had been abandoned).

                                    1
 Stallings’s employers and direct liability for negligent hiring,

 training, and supervision.

¶3    On April 19, 2024, after a five-day trial, a jury found in favor

 of Harris and awarded Harris $1.2 million in noneconomic damages

 and $75,000 in physical impairment damages. The jury found

 Stallings to be 5% at fault and found the employers, identified in

 the verdict form as “Premier Medical Corporation/Lincare Holdings,

 Inc.,” to be 95% at fault for their negligent training and supervision

 of Stallings.

¶4    Several days later, Harris filed a motion for entry of judgment

 along with a proposed order of judgment that did not reduce the

 noneconomic damage award according to the statutory cap on such

 damages. See § 13-21-102.5(3), C.R.S. 2024. Specifically, Harris

 argued that the cap should be applied on a per defendant basis and

 that because Premier and Lincare were separate entities, the total

 award did not exceed the statutory cap. The employers objected,

 arguing that, because the parties had treated the employers as a

 single entity, the cap must apply to the single award as it relates to

 those companies.




                                    2
¶5    On June 27, 2024, the trial court entered a signed, written

 order titled “Order Regarding Motion for Entry of Judgment” (the

 June order). In this order, the trial court agreed with employers

 and apportioned the judgment consistent with the jury’s findings

 and applied the statutory cap to reduce the award against the

 employers. The June order stated that “[j]udgment shall enter”

 against defendants in a sum certain ($539,260 against the

 employers and $63,750 against Stallings) plus statutory interest.

 Further, the order stated that Harris was entitled to “interest on the

 aforesaid amounts of the verdict at the rate of 9% per annum from

 the date of the subject incident, December 23, 2019, until the

 judgment is paid.” The court then instructed Harris to submit a

 new proposed order of judgment “consistent with the Court’s

 findings and parameters.”

¶6    Harris complied with that instruction on July 11, 2024,

 submitting a proposed order of judgment consistent with the June

 order. In this proposed order, Harris calculated the prejudgment

 interest through July 11, 2024. As drafted by Harris, the proposed

 order ended with “Judgment Enters on July 11, 2024.” On July 16,




                                   3
 the trial court signed this proposed order without changes (the July

 order).

¶7    On August 29, 2024, Harris filed a notice of appeal identifying

 several orders he wished to appeal, including the June order and

 the July order, as well as a pretrial ruling denying his request to

 seek exemplary damages. He asserted that judgment entered on

 July 11, 2024, but was filed and served on the parties on July 16,

 2024.

                            II.   Jurisdiction

¶8    We must first address our jurisdiction to hear this appeal.

¶9    After briefing was complete, this court issued an order

 directing Harris to show cause why the appeal should not be

 dismissed with prejudice for failure to file a timely notice of appeal.2

 The show cause order suggested that the June order was a final,

 appealable judgment because it met all the criteria of a judgment

 under C.R.C.P. 54(a) and 58(a): It was signed, written, and dated,


 2 As Harris notes in his response to the show cause order,

 defendants did not raise the timeliness of the appeal either in their
 briefs or through a motion to dismiss. However, “[w]e must
 determine independently our jurisdiction over an appeal, nostra
 sponte if necessary.” Allison v. Engel, 2017 COA 43, ¶ 22, overruled
 on other grounds by Wolf v. Brenneman, 2024 CO 31.

                                    4
  and it resolved all issues of liability and damages. Thus, because

  Harris filed his notice of appeal more than forty-nine days after the

  entry of the June order, it appeared that the appeal was not timely

  filed.

¶ 10       In his response, Harris argues that the June order was not a

  final and appealable judgment under C.R.C.P. 58. First, Harris

  contends that the order did not reference C.R.C.P. 58 or say that

  judgment entered on that date. Second, the trial court’s direction

  to prepare a proposed order of judgment would have been

  unnecessary if the June order were the judgment. And third, the

  clerk of the court did not enter the June order as a judgment in the

  register of actions. Alternatively, Harris argues that the court’s

  actions and statements misled him as to the date of the entry of

  judgment and, thus, the deadline for his appeal. Accordingly, we

  should determine that his untimely filing was the result of

  excusable neglect and accept the filing under C.A.R. 4(a)(4).




                                       5
¶ 11   After reviewing Harris’s response, a motions division of this

  court deferred the determination of this court’s jurisdiction to the

  division considering the merits of the appeal.3

¶ 12   Reviewing our jurisdiction de novo, Stone Grp. Holdings LLC v.

  Ellison, 2024 COA 10, ¶ 15, we conclude that the June order was a

  final and appealable judgment, which Harris did not timely appeal;

  nevertheless, we further conclude that he has demonstrated

  excusable neglect for not doing so. Consequently, we accept the

  appeal.

¶ 13   We begin by considering whether the June order was a

  judgment. We conclude that it was.

                          A.    Applicable Law

¶ 14   C.R.C.P. 54(a) defines “judgment” as “a decree and order to or

  from which an appeal lies.” C.R.C.P. 58(a) provides that “[t]he term

  ‘judgment’ includes an appealable decree or order as set forth in

  C.R.C.P. 54(a).” Rule 58(a) also provides that

            [s]ubject to the provisions of C.R.C.P. 54(b),
            upon a general or special verdict of a jury . . .
            the court shall promptly prepare, date, and
            sign a written judgment and the clerk shall

  3 Though given the opportunity to file a response to the show cause

  order, no defendant did so.

                                    6
            enter it on the register of actions as provided
            in C.R.C.P. 79(a). . . . The effective date of
            entry of judgment shall be the actual date of
            the signing of the written judgment. The
            notation in the register of actions shall show
            the effective date of the judgment.

  C.R.C.P. 79(a)(4) provides, “The notation of an order, or of the entry

  of judgment, shall show the date the order or judgment was ordered

  in open court, in chambers, or under the provisions of Rule 55

  regarding default.” C.R.C.P. 79(d) requires that the district court

  clerk “keep a judgment record in which a notation shall be made of

  every money judgment.”

¶ 15   The court of appeals has jurisdiction over appeals from final

  judgments of the district courts. § 13-4-102(1), C.R.S. 2024. “[A]

  final judgment is ‘one that ends the particular action in which it is

  entered, leaving nothing further for the court pronouncing it to do

  in order to completely determine the rights of the parties involved in

  the proceedings.’” Chavez v. Chavez, 2020 COA 70, ¶ 24 (quoting

  People v. G.S., 2018 CO 31, ¶ 37). In other words, a final judgment

  is one that fully resolves liability and reduces damages (including

  prejudgment interest) to a sum certain. Stone Grp. Holdings, ¶ 18.




                                    7
  Prejudgment interest is reduced to a sum certain if it is easily

  calculable from the face of the judgment. Id. at ¶ 25.

¶ 16    The notice of appeal must be filed with the appellate court

  within forty-nine days after entry of the judgment or order being

  appealed. C.A.R. 4(a)(1). Rule 4 also provides that “[a] judgment or

  order is entered within the meaning of section (a)(1) and (a)(4) when

  it is entered pursuant to C.R.C.P. 58,” and the time for the filing of

  the notice of appeal runs from the date of the mailing or electronic

  service of the notice of the entry of the judgment or order. C.A.R.

  4(a)(5).

                              B.    Analysis

¶ 17    The core issue is whether the June order was a final and

  appealable judgment. The order fully resolved liability. It reduced

  the jury’s damage award to a sum certain. And it stated that

  prejudgment interest would run from the date of the incident and

  be calculated at 9% per annum. In other words, the prejudgment

  interest could be calculated from the face of the order. Thus, the

  June order met all the criteria of a final and appealable judgment.

¶ 18    Harris contends otherwise. As noted, Harris points out that

  the order did not state that judgment entered on that date; did not


                                     8
  reference C.R.C.P. 58; said “so ordered” as opposed to “judgment

  enters”; and used the future tense, “judgment shall enter,” without

  specifying a date. Further, the court ordered him to prepare a

  “proposed order of judgment consistent with the court’s findings”

  within fourteen days. Finally, Harris relies on the fact that the

  court clerk did not enter the June order in the register of actions as

  a judgment on that date.

¶ 19   Though true, none of these facts negates the finality of the

  June order. C.R.C.P. 58 does not require a judgment to explicitly

  invoke the rule itself, nor does it require any other particular

  language — and Harris points us to no authority that does. To the

  contrary, “[i]n determining whether an order is final, we look to the

  legal effect of the order rather than its form.” Luster v. Brinkman,

  250 P.3d 664, 666 (Colo. App. 2010). Nor is “judgment shall enter”

  necessarily a use of future tense. Indeed, while that language could

  be described as stilted legalese and a bit arcane, such language is

  commonly used at the time judgment is entered by trial courts

  throughout the state without precluding finality. See, e.g., In re

  Parental Responsibilities Concerning M.B-M., 252 P.3d 506, 508-09

  (Colo. App. 2011) (holding that the magistrate’s signed minute order


                                     9
  saying, “[J]udgment shall enter” . . . in the amount of $1,500,” was

  a final order that the magistrate lacked authority to alter with later

  ruling). Reading the court’s language in this light, we disagree with

  Harris’s contention that the order did not state that judgment

  entered.4

¶ 20   We acknowledge that the trial court created some confusion by

  asking Harris to prepare an unnecessary “proposed order of

  judgment consistent with the court’s findings.” But a superfluous

  order, even it titled “final judgment,” does not abrogate the finality

  or appealability of a proper final judgment already entered. See

  Stone Grp. Holdings, ¶ 37 (concluding that order that reduced

  sanctions amount to a sum certain was the final order and

  subsequent order entering “final judgment” was superfluous).

¶ 21   Finally, Rule 58(a) provides that the effective date is

  determined by the date the written judgment is signed, and then

  that date shall be entered in the register of actions. It does not


  4 In light of our conclusion that the language of the June order

  satisfied all the elements of a judgment, we necessarily reject
  Harris’s claim that E-Service of the June order on the parties (which
  the judicial department’s case management system reflects
  occurred the day the order was entered) was not sufficient to trigger
  C.A.R. 4(a)(5)’s forty-nine-day clock for filing the notice of appeal.

                                    10
  work in the other direction. In other words, the date of the

  judgment entered in the register of actions does not determine the

  date of finality. Indeed, if an administrative failure to enter the

  judgment in the register of actions defeated finality, a party could

  be deprived of the opportunity to appeal merely because this purely

  ministerial task was not completed.

¶ 22   In sum, the June order was a final and appealable judgment.

  But that does not end our inquiry. Upon a showing of excusable

  neglect, we may extend the time for filing a notice of appeal by up to

  thirty-five days. C.A.R. 4(a)(4). “Excusable neglect involves a

  situation where the failure to act results from circumstances which

  would cause a reasonably careful person to neglect a duty.”

  Farmers Ins. Grp. v. Dist. Ct., 507 P.2d 865, 867 (Colo. 1973).

¶ 23   Here, we conclude the trial court’s actions created sufficient

  confusion about the effect of the June order and the timing for filing

  an appeal such that a reasonably careful lawyer may nevertheless

  have been misled. Specifically, though there was no reason to do

  so, the court instructed counsel to prepare and submit a revised

  proposed order that would contain nothing more than what the

  court had just announced. Thus, it was reasonable for counsel to


                                     11
  believe that the order left something more to do, notwithstanding

  the fact that the June order met all the requirements of a final and

  appealable judgment. That confusion was then exacerbated by the

  court’s purporting to enter judgment on a later date and by the

  court clerk’s incorrectly indicating the date of judgment in the

  register of actions.

¶ 24   Thus, while in general “counsel has the obligation to

  determine in the first instance whether there is a final, appealable

  order, and should make that determination in a diligent and

  informed manner,” Chavez, ¶ 36, the fact that counsel did not do so

  here is understandable. We therefore conclude that counsel’s

  neglect in failing to file a timely appeal was excusable. And because

  the appeal was filed within the additional thirty-five days permitted

  under C.A.R. 4(a)(4), we exercise our discretion to extend the

  deadline for filing to the date the appeal was filed. Accordingly, we

  have jurisdiction over the appeal.

                             III.   The Merits

¶ 25   Turning to the merits of the appeal, Harris asserts two claims.

  First, he argues that the trial court erred by treating the employers

  as a single entity when applying the statutory cap on damages.


                                     12
  Second, he contends that the trial court erroneously denied his

  request to amend the complaint to assert claims for exemplary

  damages against defendants. We address each issue in turn.

             A.   Treating the Employers as a Single Entity

¶ 26   We conclude that Harris waived any challenge to treating

  Premier and Lincare as a single entity in this case.

                      1.    Additional Background

¶ 27   Before trial, Harris moved for partial summary judgment,

  arguing that it was undisputed that, in addition to Premier, Lincare

  was also Stallings’s employer. In response to the motion, the

  employers denied that Lincare was Stallings’s employer. But the

  employers also recognized that the business relationship between

  Lincare and Premier may be confusing to the jury and stated that

  they were willing to stipulate that Premier and Lincare could be

  considered “one in the same.”

¶ 28   Harris replied, opposing this language and proposing his own:

  “On July 23, 2018, Premier Medical Corporation and RCS

  Management Holding Company were acquired by Lincare Holdings,

  Inc. After the acquisition, each entity had the right to control Mr.

  Stallings’s work. The parties agree that the entities are each


                                    13
  considered Mr. Stallings’s employers for purposes of this case.” In

  addition to other reasons, Harris contended that this language

  would reduce jury confusion and allow the parties to “separately

  address” issues regarding the apportionment of liability and

  application of Colorado’s noneconomic damages cap under sections

  13-21-111.6, C.R.S. 2024, and 13-21-102.5. The court concluded

  that there was a genuine dispute of material fact about who

  Stallings’s employers were but nevertheless adopted the employers’

  proposed language.5

¶ 29   Harris filed proposed jury instructions, with special verdict

  forms, treating Lincare and Premier as two distinct defendants and

  asking the jury to apportion damages amongst (1) Stallings;

  (2) Premier; and (3) Lincare.

¶ 30   At trial, the court stated that it was redoing the jury

  instructions and verdict form. The court said, “I don’t know how

  you want to list the companies. They shouldn’t be listed separately.

  They should be, like Lincare/Premier Medical. I want to make it


  5 Notwithstanding the fact that the employers’ language was a

  unilateral suggestion to which Harris objected and offered opposing
  language, the trial court characterized its ruling as “adopt[ing] that
  stipulation.”

                                    14
  like, something like that.” Harris’s counsel responded, “You read

  our minds, your Honor, because we just agreed on that.”

¶ 31   The next day, the court provided the parties with proposed

  instructions. The instructions repeatedly referred to “Defendant

  Premier Medical Corporation/Lincare Holdings, Inc.,” and stated

  “both of the defendants Dustin Stallings and Premier Medical

  Corporation/Lincare Holdings, Inc.” The instructions also asked

  the jury to determine the total amount of damages and what

  percent of damages were caused by the negligence or fault of

  “Defendant Dustin Stallings for his driving” and of “Defendant

  Premier Medical Corporation/Lincare Holdings, Inc. for its training

  and/or supervision of Dustin Stallings.”

¶ 32   The court asked Harris’s counsel if he wanted to make a

  record regarding the proposed instructions. Harris’s counsel

  stated, “[W]e reviewed the instructions you e-mailed, and we do not

  object to any of the instructions you proposed giving.”

                             2.    Analysis

¶ 33   Defendants argue that Harris invited the error and thus

  cannot raise it on appeal. We disagree that Harris invited any error.

  He never asked for the two companies to be treated as a single


                                   15
  entity and objected to the language the trial court adopted as a

  mischaracterized “stipulation.” Thus, it simply cannot be said that

  Harris “injected into the case” any error in this regard. See

  Blakeland Drive Invs., LLP IV v. Taghavi, 2023 COA 30M, ¶ 52.

¶ 34   However, Harris waived his right to complain about the error.6

¶ 35   When “the trial court requests input from the parties on the

  proposed instructions, and a party affirms that it has no objections

  to any of them, the party waives any claim of error based on the

  instructions.” Hendricks v. Allied Waste Transp., Inc., 2012 COA

  88, ¶ 31.

¶ 36   Harris’s counsel agreed to the instruction and the verdict form

  proposed by the court treating Premier and Lincare as one entity.

  This instruction and verdict form explicitly asked the jury to

  allocate damages between only Stallings and the employers; the

  jury was never asked to allocate the percentage of responsibility

  between Premier and Lincare. By not objecting to the instruction or




  6 Although the employers do not argue waiver, we have an

  affirmative, independent obligation to determine whether a claim of
  error was preserved. See Gomez v. Walker, 2023 COA 79, ¶ 25 n.6.

                                    16
  the verdict form, Harris waived any appellate challenge to the issue

  of treating the employers as a single entity. See id. at ¶ 32.

¶ 37   “[W]aiver extinguishes error, and therefore appellate

  review . . . .” People v. Rediger, 2018 CO 32, ¶ 40. Because he

  waived this issue, Harris cannot now argue that the trial court

  erred by not treating Premier and Lincare as two distinct entities

  when applying the damages cap in section 13-21-102.5(3)(a). See

  Gen. Elec. Co. v. Niemet, 866 P.2d 1361, 1362 (Colo. 1994) (holding

  that the cap in section 13-21-102.5 applies to the liability share of

  each defendant in a case). We thus decline to address this

  argument further.

            B.   Request to Add Exemplary Damages Claims

¶ 38   Harris next contends that the trial court erred by denying his

  motion for leave to amend his complaint to add exemplary damages

  claims. We agree.

                      1.    Additional Background

¶ 39   Harris filed a motion for leave to amend the complaint to add

  claims for exemplary damages under section 13-21-102, C.R.S.

  2024. He alleged that his injury was attended by circumstances of

  fraud because Stallings testified that he did not receive any training


                                    17
  from the employers after his initial onboarding; however, the

  training logs showed that Stallings had completed additional

  training, and Premier testified that those logs were accurate and

  that Stallings had completed numerous training courses during his

  employment. He argued that based on this contradictory evidence,

  either Stallings lied to his employers about his level of training, or

  the employers committed fraud by falsifying a record of Stallings’s

  training history.

¶ 40   Harris further alleged that Stallings acted willfully and

  wantonly by failing to take an alcohol or controlled substance

  screening test within the time required by the employers’ policies

  and federal regulations. Harris argued that this would support an

  inference that Stallings must have been intoxicated at the time of

  the incident.

¶ 41   Harris also alleged that the employers’ conduct was willful and

  wanton because they knew Stallings was an unsafe driver.

  Specifically, Harris claimed that Premier knew of a prior accident in

  which Stallings was following the car in front of him too closely and

  was distracted by his cell phone, yet the company took no action in

  response to this accident. He alleges that Premier obtained


                                     18
  Stallings’s driving record twice and that both times it stated, “MVR

  NOT CLEAR,” but the company took no action. And he alleges that

  Premier did not report the earlier accident (because it did not

  appear on Stallings’s driving records) and that this failure to report

  prevented Lincare from learning about the accident.

¶ 42     Finally, he alleged the employers required Stallings to work an

  illegal schedule leading up to this incident in violation of federal

  law.

¶ 43     Harris later supplemented his motion with an internal email

  between Lincare’s Safety Administrator for Vehicle Accidents and

  Stallings’s supervisor, in which the supervisor was told, “We can’t

  con[ti]nue to put the Public or Lincare in Harm’s way by our

  driver[’]s reckless behavior and driving habits.” Harris also

  included a monthly report, which provided insight into Stallings’s

  driving habits during the month of the incident, including that he

  harshly cornered 119 times.

¶ 44     Defendants objected to Harris’s request to add exemplary

  damages claims. As to Stallings’s training records, they pointed to

  contrary evidence, including deposition testimony that Stallings did

  not recall if he took certain trainings, documents that showed


                                     19
  Stallings did take those trainings, documents showing Stallings

  filled out an accident report after the prior incident and was

  assigned and completed additional training, logs showing the

  number of hours Stallings worked leading up to the incident, and

  documents showing how much vacation Stallings took leading up to

  the incident. Defendants also contended that Harris miscited the

  employers’ policies and federal regulations.

¶ 45   The trial court denied the motion, finding that

            Plaintiff has shown no prima facie evidence to
            support adding a claim for exemplary
            damages. Plaintiff has not established facts in
            which “the injury complained of is attended by
            circumstances of fraud, malice, or willful and
            wanton conduct.” C.R.S. § 13-21-102(1)(a).
            Plaintiff solely offers argument and speculation
            to support its position. That is insufficient.
            Therefore, the Court denies the motion on
            those grounds alone.

              2.   Standard of Review and Applicable Law

¶ 46   “The question of whether the plaintiff has established

  sufficient proof to add a claim for exemplary damages lies within

  the sound discretion of the trial court.” Stamp v. Vail Corp., 172

  P.3d 437, 449 (Colo. 2007). The trial court’s ruling will not be

  disturbed unless we determine that the trial court abused its



                                    20
  discretion. Id. “A court abuses its discretion when its ruling is

  manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or is based on a

  misapprehension or misapplication of the law.” In re Estate of

  Chavez, 2022 COA 89M, ¶ 19. “A trial court necessarily abuses its

  discretion if its ruling is based on an incorrect legal standard.

  Whether the trial court applied the correct legal standard is a

  question of law we review de novo.” Sunahara v. State Farm Mut.

  Auto. Ins. Co., 2012 CO 30M, ¶ 12.

¶ 47   “Prima facie proof of a triable issue of exemplary damages is

  established by ‘a showing of a reasonable likelihood that the issue

  will ultimately be submitted to the jury for resolution.’” Stamp, 172

  P.3d at 449 (quoting Leidholt v. Dist. Ct., 619 P.2d 768, 771 n.3

  (Colo. 1980)). “Such proof may be established through discovery,

  by evidentiary means, or by an offer of proof.” Id. “Prima facie

  evidence is evidence that, unless rebutted, is sufficient to establish

  a fact.” Id. The “prima facie proof” requirement is a “lenient

  standard.” Id. at 450. In assessing whether the requisite prima

  facie showing has been made, we view the evidence in the light most

  favorable to the moving party to determine whether a reasonable

  fact finder could find for the moving party. Cf. Boryla v. Pash, 960


                                    21
  P.2d 123, 126-27 (Colo. 1998) (in assessing whether a party has

  made out a prima facie case sufficient to withstand a motion for

  directed verdict, the court considers all of the facts in the light most

  favorable to the nonmoving party to determine whether a

  reasonable jury could have found in its favor).

¶ 48   When actual damages are assessed by a jury, the jury may

  also award reasonable exemplary damages “for a wrong done to the

  person or to personal or real property” if the injury is “attended by

  circumstances of fraud, malice, or willful and wanton conduct.”

  § 13-21-102(1)(a). “[W]illful and wanton conduct” is conduct that is

  “purposefully committed which the actor must have realized as

  dangerous, done heedlessly and recklessly, without regard to

  consequences, or of the rights and safety of others, particularly the

  plaintiff.” § 13-21-102(1)(b).

¶ 49   “The injured party need prove only ‘circumstances of fraud’

  surrounding a tortious act resulting in damages.” Amber Props.,

  Ltd. v. Howard Elec. & Mech. Co., 775 P.2d 43, 46 (Colo. App. 1988).

  “The elements of ‘circumstances of fraud’ are identical with the

  necessary elements of fraud.” Id. (citing Palmer v. A.H. Robins Co.,

  684 P.2d 187 (Colo. 1984)). “Fraud generally consists of a false


                                     22
  representation of a material existing fact, made with knowledge or

  utter disregard of its falsity, with the intent to induce another to

  rely upon the representation and to take detrimental action

  thereon.” Palmer, 684 P.2d at 214-15.

                              3.    Analysis

¶ 50   When requesting permission to add exemplary damages

  claims, Harris submitted deposition testimony and documents,

  including emails and driving data reports. He alleged specific facts

  that, if true, could support inferences of fraudulent acts and willful

  and wanton behavior.

¶ 51   The trial court recognized that prima facie proof of a triable

  issue of exemplary damages can be established through discovery,

  by evidentiary means, or by an offer of proof showing a reasonable

  likelihood that the issue will ultimately be submitted to the jury for

  resolution. The court also stated that the evidence must be viewed

  in the light most favorable to Harris and that the standard for

  establishing a prima facie case is lenient.

¶ 52   Yet, notwithstanding its correct recitation of the analytical

  rubric, the trial court concluded that Harris solely offered argument

  and speculation to support his position. The court denied the


                                     23
  motion “on those grounds alone.”7 In doing so, the court did not

  apply the lenient standard it had just recited. Moreover, in order to

  reach that conclusion, the trial court necessarily conducted some

  level of factfinding and resolved conflicts in the evidence to conclude

  that Harris’s position was speculative. Cf. Boryla, 960 P.2d at

  126-27. This is a misapplication of the legal standard.

¶ 53   Contrary to the trial court’s analysis, Harris presented

  sufficient evidence to establish “a reasonable likelihood that the

  issue w[ould] ultimately be submitted to the jury for resolution.”

  Stamp, 172 P.3d at 449 (quoting Leidholt, 619 P.2d at 771 n.3).8

  Thus, the trial court should have granted Harris’s motion to amend

  the complaint to add exemplary damages claims against Stallings

  and the employers and to allow the jury to resolve the competing

  evidence and inferences therefrom. We thus remand for a trial



  7 Defendants argued that Harris’s motion for leave to amend the

  complaint was filed after the deadline for such motions established
  in the case management order. Harris had acknowledged that fact
  in his motion but asserted that the tardiness was created by
  defendants’ numerous delays in complying with discovery. The
  court did not consider the motion untimely, noting that the trial
  had been reset, and thus, “untimeliness [wa]s no longer a factor.”
  8 We, of course, express no opinion on whether Harris’s claim for

  exemplary damages will ultimately be successful.

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  solely on the exemplary damages claims. See Amber Props., Ltd.,

  775 P.2d at 47.

                             IV.   Disposition

¶ 54   The judgment for actual damages is affirmed. The order

  denying Harris’s motion to amend the complaint to add exemplary

  damages claims is reversed. The matter is remanded with

  instructions (1) to amend the register of actions to reflect entry of

  the actual damages judgment on June 27, 2024; and (2) to conduct

  a trial on Harris’s claims for exemplary damages only. At trial, the

  court shall advise the jury about the nature of Harris’s claims; that

  the liability of Stallings and the employers pursuant to those

  claims, including the pro rata allocation of fault, has been

  determined; and that actual damages have been awarded on each of

  the claims, including the amount of each award, and it shall

  instruct the jurors only on the law relating to the issues concerning

  exemplary damages.

       JUDGE YUN and JUDGE SULLIVAN concur.




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