24CA2136 Cotton v Scholle 01-22-2026
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 24CA2136 Routt County District Court No. 23CV30004 Honorable Michael A. O’Hara III, Judge
Christopher Cotton,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
William Scholle,
Defendant-Appellant.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED
Division III Opinion by JUDGE KUHN Dunn and Martinez*, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced January 22, 2026
Ramos Law, Jared J. Mazzei, Jessica L. McBryant, Northglenn, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
Garnett Powell Maximon Barlow & Farbes, Robert L. Barlow, Kristin L. Arthur, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
*Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions of Colo. Const. art. VI, § 5(3), and § 24-51-1105, C.R.S. 2025. ¶1 Defendant, William Scholle, appeals the trial court’s pretrial
C.R.C.P. 56(h) order determining that he wasn’t entitled to recover
certain damages under the wrong-of-another doctrine from plaintiff,
Christopher Cotton. We affirm.
I. Background
¶2 One Saturday afternoon in January 2022, Cotton met up with
his girlfriend at a Steamboat Springs restaurant to celebrate the
sale of his townhome. After eating lunch and having at least one
margarita and a tequila shot at the restaurant, Cotton and his
girlfriend continued the celebration at a bar. There, he consumed
various alcoholic beverages, including multiple beers and bourbon
shots. Cotton stayed at the bar until evening, when he left his
girlfriend behind and, intoxicated, started to drive back home. He
didn’t remember much about what happened after that point.
¶3 The record shows that, instead of going home, Cotton drove
onto Scholle’s property about an hour and a half after he had left
the bar. He turned off a rural county road, went through an open
gate, and drove up a long driveway leading to Scholle’s newly
constructed residence, located about three-tenths of a mile from the
road. Upon approaching the residence, Cotton drove off the
1 driveway, down around the side of the home, and into the backyard,
before crashing into a snowbank. Stuck in the snow at an
unknown location, Cotton left a voicemail for his girlfriend: “Hey.
I’m stuck. I don’t know how to get out of it[.] Please. Give me a
call.”
¶4 Shortly thereafter, Scholle confronted Cotton, who was a
stranger to him, with a handgun while his wife and two minor
daughters remained inside the home. During this encounter,
Scholle ordered an unarmed Cotton to, among other things, walk
away from his car and lay face down on the concrete patio. Then
Scholle’s wife ordered Cotton to place his hands on his head while
lying on the ground. Cotton complied with these commands and
got down on the patio with his feet still in the snow. While on the
ground, however, Cotton told the Scholles that he was “freezin[g] to
death” and had to stand up. After getting up, he started to walk
toward the open patio sliding glass door where Scholle and his wife
were standing. Then Scholle shot Cotton once in the abdomen from
a close distance. Cotton suffered severe injuries but survived the
shooting.
2 ¶5 In Routt County Case No. 22CR70, the district attorney’s office
charged Scholle with first degree assault with a deadly weapon,
felony menacing, and prohibited use of a weapon.1 A jury acquitted
him of all criminal charges.
¶6 In the meantime, Cotton filed the present civil action against
Scholle in connection with the shooting. Cotton asserted claims for
negligence, battery, and premises liability, pleading the latter two
claims in the alternative to the negligence claim. In response,
Scholle counterclaimed for trespass and intrusion upon seclusion.2
He also sought “attorney fees related to [Scholle’s] defense [in the
criminal case], which were proximately caused by . . . Cotton’s
intrusion.”
¶7 Before trial, Cotton filed a Rule 56(h) “Motion for [a]
Determination of a Question of Law Regarding . . . Scholle’s
Damages Arising from His Criminal Defense.” Cotton argued that
1 We take judicial notice of the contents of court records in this
related criminal proceeding. See People v. Sa’ra, 117 P.3d 51, 56 (Colo. App. 2004).
2 Scholle’s wife intervened and filed a complaint against Cotton, also
asserting claims for trespass and intrusion upon seclusion. Cotton stipulated to the wife’s dismissal from the case before trial.
3 Scholle wasn’t entitled to recover under the wrong-of-another
doctrine about $1.3 million in attorney fees and related expenses
that Scholle had incurred for his criminal defense because the
prosecutor’s decision to charge him in connection with the incident
wasn’t a natural and “probable consequence of Cotton mistakenly
entering upon Scholle’s property without permission.” Instead,
Cotton argued, Scholle intentionally shooting him was the cause of
the underlying criminal litigation.
¶8 In his response to the motion, Scholle argued that genuine
issues of material fact precluded resolving his wrong-of-another
damages under Rule 56(h). Specifically, noting that the criminal
jury had acquitted him of all charges in the criminal case, Scholle
posited that his “arguably . . . justifiabl[e]” shooting of Cotton and
the resulting criminal prosecution were reasonably foreseeable
consequences of Cotton’s conduct. Scholle argued that, under
these circumstances, the trial court was required to submit the
issue of his entitlement to the claimed damages to the jury rather
than resolving the question as a matter of law. The trial court
granted the motion, concluding that the wrong-of-another doctrine
was inapplicable because Scholle’s shooting, the prosecutor’s
4 decision to bring criminal charges, and the associated litigation
expenses weren’t foreseeable consequences of Cotton’s conduct.
¶9 Cotton’s premises liability claim and Scholle’s counterclaims
proceeded to trial, over which a different judge presided.3 At
Scholle’s request, the trial court directed a verdict in his favor on
his trespass counterclaim, awarding him nominal damages of $1.
Scholle simultaneously withdrew his counterclaim for intrusion
upon seclusion. The jury returned a special verdict for Cotton on
his premises liability claim, awarding him $500,000 in
noneconomic damages and $530,870.97 in economic damages.
II. Analysis
¶ 10 Scholle contends that the trial court erred by determining
that, as a matter of law, he wasn’t entitled to recover the claimed
wrong-of-another damages pertaining to his criminal defense
because (1) the court improperly considered the credibility of
witnesses in granting the Rule 56(h) motion; and (2) genuine issues
3 Before trial, the court dismissed Cotton’s claims for negligence
and battery, reasoning that the Premises Liability Act preempted those claims by providing an exclusive remedy for his claimed injuries. Cotton doesn’t challenge this ruling on appeal. See City of Aurora v. 1405 Hotel, LLC, 2016 COA 52, ¶ 16 n.3 (noting no need to address an issue not raised on appeal).
5 of material fact existed as to whether Cotton proximately caused the
underlying criminal prosecution, precluding the court from deciding
that issue as a question of law. We discern no reversible error.
A. Standard of Review
¶ 11 Rule 56(h) allows a party to move for a determination of a
question of law at any time after the last pleading is filed. Because
the summary judgment standard applies to such a motion, Coffman
v. Williamson, 2015 CO 35, ¶ 12, a trial court may grant an order
under Rule 56(h) only “[i]f there is no genuine issue of any material
fact necessary for the determination of the question of law.” In
determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, the
court looks at the “pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits,”
C.R.C.P. 56(c), without assessing witness credibility or weighing
evidence, S. Conejos Sch. Dist. RE-10 v. Wold Architects Inc., 2023
COA 85, ¶ 17. “The nonmoving party is entitled to all favorable
inferences from the undisputed facts, and all doubts as to the
existence of a triable issue of fact must be resolved against the
moving party.” Williamson, ¶ 12.
6 ¶ 12 We review de novo a trial court’s order deciding a question of
law under Rule 56(h). Great N. Props., LLLP v. Extraction Oil & Gas,
Inc., 2024 CO 28, ¶ 20. In doing so, we apply the same standards
as the trial court. Mitton v. Danimaxx of Colo., Inc., 2023 COA 18,
¶ 9. We will not reverse a trial court’s decision to grant a Rule 56(h)
motion if we conclude that any error was harmless. See C.A.R.
35(c) (“The appellate court may disregard any error or defect not
affecting the substantial rights of the parties.”). An error is
harmless when it doesn’t affect a substantial right of a party, and a
court must set aside such errors at every stage of the proceedings.
C.R.C.P. 61. “An error affects a substantial right only if ‘it can be
said with fair assurance that the error substantially influenced the
outcome of the case or impaired the basic fairness of the trial
itself.’” Bly v. Story, 241 P.3d 529, 535 (Colo. 2010) (quoting Banek
v. Thomas, 733 P.2d 1171, 1178 (Colo. 1986)).
B. Basic Principles of the Wrong-of-Another Doctrine
¶ 13 “Colorado — like many states — has long-recognized that
litigation expenses and attorneys’ fees incurred by a party in one
case may, in certain circumstances, be an appropriate measure of
damages against a third party in a subsequent action.” Rocky
7 Mountain Festivals, Inc. v. Parsons Corp., 242 P.3d 1067, 1071
(Colo. 2010) (footnote omitted). This rule, known as the wrong-of-
another doctrine, doesn’t establish a stand-alone cause of action or
constitute “an exception to the so-called American rule that parties
are responsible for their own litigation costs and fees.” Id. Instead,
it is only “an acknowledgement that the litigation costs incurred by
a party in [a] separate litigation may sometimes be an appropriate
measure of compensatory damages against another party.” Id.
¶ 14 Specifically, reasonable litigation costs and attorney fees may
be recovered as damages from a third-party wrongdoer “[w]hen the
natural and probable consequence of a wrongful act has been to
involve [the party seeking the damages] in litigation with others.”
Elijah v. Fender, 674 P.2d 946, 951 (Colo. 1984) (quoting Int’l State
Bank of Trinidad v. Trinidad Bean & Elevator Co., 245 P. 489, 489
(Colo. 1926)); see also Restatement (Second) of Torts: Damages
§ 914(2) (A.L.I. 1979) (featuring a restatement of the wrong-of-
another doctrine in the chapter on damages). In other words, the
doctrine only allows a party to seek reasonable attorney fees and
costs from a third-party wrongdoer if the wrongdoer’s conduct was
a proximate cause of the underlying dispute.
8 ¶ 15 Such damages are recoverable even if a party requesting them
brought and ultimately failed to prevail in the underlying action.
See Elijah, 674 P.2d at 951 (noting that the wrong-of-another
doctrine doesn’t require “that a party be a defendant in prior
litigation to recover costs” or “that the party prevail in the earlier
litigation”). Likewise, recovery is allowed even if a third party’s
“wrongful conduct [was only] one of the causes that in natural and
probable consequence produced the claimed expense.” Stevens v.
Moore & Co. Realtor, 874 P.2d 495, 497 (Colo. App. 1994). The
third party’s wrongful conduct need not be the sole cause of the
prior litigation. Id.; Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc., 242 P.3d at
1071. However, the wrong-of-another doctrine applies “only if the
party seeking such attorney fees was without fault as to the
underlying action.” Brochner v. W. Ins. Co., 724 P.2d 1293, 1300
(Colo. 1986) (emphasis added). So in evaluating fault, we consider
whether the party’s own actions caused the underlying litigation.
See Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc., 242 P.3d at 1072.
9 C. The Trial Court Erred by Relying on Its Factual Findings Made in the Criminal Proceeding to Decide the Rule 56(h) Motion
¶ 16 In addressing whether Scholle had compensable damages
under the wrong-of-another doctrine, the trial court observed that
while the “matter [was] presented in a motion for [a] determination
of [a] question of law, the court [was] in the unique posture of
having previously considered the evidence and made findings or
conclusions that [we]re directly relevant to the questions of
proximate cause, foreseeability, and intervening acts.” The court
noted that, during the “make my day” immunity hearing in the
criminal case, over which the same trial judge presided, “[t]he court
found that certain factual statements made by [Scholle] and his wife
at the hearing were incredible as a matter of law because they
differed from the facts presented by the Scholles to law enforcement
the night of the incident.”
¶ 17 Specifically, Scholle testified at the immunity hearing that
Cotton had lunged at Scholle — and engaged in a physical
altercation with him — before agreeing to get on the ground. The
court noted that Scholle had also testified that Cotton “suddenly
rose from the ground, after [thirty to forty] seconds, got into a
10 crouch position, reached towards his waistband, and moved quickly
and aggressively towards [the Scholles] while reaching for what
[Scholle] thought might have been a weapon.”
¶ 18 The court reiterated that Scholle’s version of the events wasn’t
credible. The court noted that Scholle failed to provide these details
to responding police officers the night of the incident. The court
then found that Scholle “did not have a reasonable belief that
[Cotton] was doing anything at the time [of the shooting] other than
standing up and that [Scholle] could not have a reasonable belief
that [Cotton] was going to use physical force against anyone.”
Consequently, the court concluded that Scholle wasn’t entitled to
recover his criminal defense expenses under the wrong-of-another
doctrine because the prosecutor’s decision to bring criminal charges
against him wasn’t a foreseeable consequence of Cotton’s conduct.
The court reasoned that “the charging decision was not foreseeable
because, based on common sense perceptions of risks created by
various conditions and circumstances, the shooting and [the]
charging decision were not within the scope of danger created by
[Cotton’s] conduct.”
11 ¶ 19 Scholle challenges this ruling on the grounds that the trial
court failed to determine whether there was a factual dispute for the
jury to resolve as to whether Cotton’s conduct was a proximate
cause of the underlying criminal prosecution. Instead, Scholle
asserts, the court decided the Rule 56(h) motion by improperly
relying on the credibility determinations and factual findings that it
had previously made at the “make my day” immunity hearing in the
separate criminal case. We agree with Scholle.
¶ 20 As noted, summary judgment principles govern motions for a
determination of a question of law under Rule 56(h). Williamson,
¶ 12; Stapleton v. Pub. Emps. Ret. Ass’n, 2013 COA 116, ¶ 20. This
means that in deciding whether to grant a Rule 56(h) motion, a trial
court’s function is to determine whether any material facts are
disputed, presenting a genuine triable issue for the jury to resolve.
See Andersen v. Lindenbaum, 160 P.3d 237, 239 (Colo. 2007). It’s
not the court’s role to determine the credibility of witnesses, assess
the weight of the evidence, or otherwise resolve factual disputes.
Id.; Capitran Inc. v. Great W. Bank, 872 P.2d 1370, 1376 (Colo. App.
1994); see also Scott Sys., Inc. v. Scott, 996 P.2d 775, 778 (Colo.
App. 2000) (noting that a trial court doesn’t engage in factfinding
12 when ruling on a motion for summary judgment). The court may
enter an order determining the question of law only if there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact necessary to reach that
determination. C.R.C.P. 56(h).
¶ 21 We conclude that the trial court violated those principles here.
The court noted in its Rule 56(h) order that, at the criminal
immunity hearing, the court had made some factual findings about
what had occurred the night of the shooting. Among other things,
the court found that
• Cotton “exited the vehicle and took a few steps towards
the patio” after his car got stuck in the snow in the
Scholles’ backyard;
• Scholle and his wife “gave commands, often conflicting,
to [Cotton]”;
• Cotton “made statements such as ‘I am not here to hurt
anyone’ and ‘I am going to freeze to death’” during the
encounter; and
• Cotton started to comply with Scholle’s order to lie down
on the concrete patio, but then he “almost immediately
began to stand up and [Scholle] shot him.”
13 ¶ 22 After summarizing these previous findings, the trial court
noted that, during the criminal immunity hearing, Scholle and his
wife provided additional details regarding the incident but that the
court didn’t find those statements credible. Specifically, the court
reiterated that it didn’t find credible the couple’s testimony that
Cotton had initiated a physical altercation with Scholle before he
agreed to get on the ground and that, after he stood up, Cotton
reached for his waistband as if he was going to pull a weapon. The
court reasoned that “no one would have omitted such ‘facts’ when
speaking for hours with law enforcement on the night of the
incident if those ‘facts’ had been true.” And considering the nature
of Cotton’s conduct in light of these findings, the court concluded
that he couldn’t have reasonably foreseen that Scholle would shoot
him and later be charged with criminal offenses.
¶ 23 This record shows that, based entirely on its factual findings
and credibility determinations from the criminal immunity hearing,
the trial court adopted a version of the incident that excluded
certain alleged acts Scholle said had happened. Because the court
didn’t find believable Scholle’s statements relating to his theory that
he had acted in defense of himself and his family, the court
14 determined that his decision to use deadly force against Cotton was
unreasonable. And based on all of this, the court then concluded
that Cotton didn’t proximately cause the shooting and the resulting
criminal prosecution of Scholle.
¶ 24 Thus, in ruling upon the Rule 56(h) motion for a determination
of a question of law, the trial court
• engaged in detailed factfinding and credibility
determinations;
• resolved the factual dispute concerning Scholle’s
self-defense and defense of others claims against him;
• and concluded that Scholle couldn’t recover wrong-of-
another damages under those circumstances because
Cotton couldn’t have reasonably foreseen the shooting
and the prosecutor’s decision to bring charges in
connection with the incident.
But the applicable summary judgment principles prohibited the
trial court from assessing the credibility of Scholle and his wife and
resolving the factual dispute against Scholle as the nonmoving
party. See Capitran, 872 P.2d at 1376; Williamson, ¶ 12.
“[F]oreseeability is the touchstone of proximate cause,” P.W. v.
15 Child.’s Hosp. Colo., 2016 CO 6, ¶ 24 n.7 (citation omitted), and is
“usually an issue for the jury to decide,” Garcia v. Colo. Cab Co.,
2023 CO 56, ¶ 19. Under these facts, there was a genuine issue of
material fact as to whether the shooting and the prosecutor’s later
decision to bring criminal charges against Scholle were foreseeable
consequences of Cotton’s conduct.
¶ 25 For these reasons, then, we conclude that the court erred by
granting the Rule 56(h) motion and deciding whether Scholle could
recoup the litigation costs and attorney fees related to his criminal
defense under the wrong-of-another doctrine. Instead, the court
should have submitted the underlying factual questions to the jury.
See Colo. Cab Co., ¶ 19 (noting that a trial court may decide
proximate causation as a question of law “[o]nly in the clearest of
cases, where reasonable minds can draw but one inference from the
evidence” (citation omitted)).
D. The Trial Court’s Error in Granting the Rule 56(h) Motion Isn’t Reversible
¶ 26 Having reached this conclusion, we must next determine
whether this error was harmless. See Bly, 241 P.3d at 535. Scholle
contends that the trial court erred by denying his claim for
16 wrong-of-another damages as a matter of law and that the jury had
to decide whether Cotton’s trespass was a proximate cause of those
damages. Scholle further argues that we should not consider
anything that happened after the trial court ruled on the Rule 56(h)
motion.
¶ 27 In response, Cotton contends that issue preclusion bars
Scholle from challenging the question of causation on appeal
because the jury’s special verdict findings that Cotton “took no
action contributing to the incident and that [Scholle] intentionally
shot [Cotton]” “decisively established” that Scholle, and not Cotton,
was “the proximate cause of the criminal litigation arising from the
shooting.” But while issue preclusion prevents a party from
relitigating an issue that was previously litigated and decided in a
separate proceeding, this doctrine doesn’t apply when the issue was
decided in the same proceeding. Reynolds v. Cotten, 2012 CO 27,
¶ 9; see S.O.V. v. People in Interest of M.C., 914 P.2d 355, 359 (Colo.
1996) (noting that issue preclusion doesn’t apply to prior rulings in
the same pending case); In re Marriage of Mallon, 956 P.2d 642, 645
(Colo. App. 1998) (noting that issue preclusion applies to later
“independent proceedings” but isn’t a bar to a “party’s later
17 assertions in the same litigation”). Thus, because the jury findings
that Cotton points us to in support of his argument originated from
the same action as the ruling that is being appealed, we conclude
that the doctrine of issue preclusion is inapplicable here.
¶ 28 Nonetheless, though he calls it issue preclusion, the gist of
Cotton’s argument is that the jury verdict supports the conclusion
that Scholle’s own actions precipitated the underlying criminal
litigation. In essence, then, Cotton argues that Scholle can’t show
that he suffered harm as a result of the trial court’s decision to
deny his damages claim as a matter of law, rather than sending
that claim to the jury.
¶ 29 We agree with Cotton on this point. We conclude that, even if
we were to assume without deciding that the shooting and the
prosecutor’s decision to bring charges against Scholle were
reasonably foreseeable consequences of Cotton’s trespass, any error
here was harmless because the jury’s verdict established that
Scholle’s conduct was also a cause of the criminal proceeding in
which he had incurred the claimed costs and attorney fees. See
Brochner, 724 P.2d at 1300; Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc., 242
P.3d at 1072.
18 1. Brochner and Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc.
¶ 30 Recall that the wrong-of-another doctrine applies “only if the
party seeking . . . attorney fees [incurred in another action] was
without fault as to the underlying action.” Brochner, 724 P.2d at
1300 (emphasis added). In Brochner, a patient sued a hospital and
one of its doctors for injuries that she had suffered during an
unnecessary brain surgery. Id. at 1294. At the time of the injury,
the hospital was aware that the doctor had performed unnecessary
brain surgeries on multiple patients in the past. Id. After the
doctor and the hospital reached a settlement with the injured
patient, the hospital separately sued the doctor to recover the
attorney fees it had incurred in defending against the patient’s
action. Id. at 1295. The trial court granted the hospital’s request,
and a division of this court affirmed that ruling under the wrong-of-
another doctrine. Id. at 1295, 1299. The supreme court reversed,
reasoning that the hospital “was required to expend sums for
attorney fees and costs in defending the [patient’s] lawsuit, in part
because of the hospital’s independently negligent conduct, and not
solely because of [the doctor’s] negligence.” Id. at 1300. Under
these circumstances, the supreme court concluded that the wrong-
19 of-another doctrine didn’t apply to the hospital’s attorney fees
claim. Id.
¶ 31 Roughly twenty-five years later, the supreme court revisited
Brochner’s holding and reasoning in Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc.,
242 P.3d at 1072. In that case, a town hired an engineering firm to
prepare an audit report concerning a festival’s water and
wastewater usage. Id. at 1069. Based on the report, the town
sought roughly $1.6 million in tap fees from a festival, consisting of
$600,000 for water and $1 million for wastewater usage. Id. at
1069-70. The festival sued the town for an injunction preventing
the town from collecting the fees. Id. at 1070. The court found
“that it was ‘without significant dispute’ that the festival owed at
least some unpaid water tap fees,” awarding $100,000 to the town.
Id. But the court also concluded that the festival prevailed on the
wastewater claim because the engineering firm’s “analysis had been
deficient on numerous points,” and the “festival had, if anything,
overpaid the town for wastewater usage.” Id.
¶ 32 The festival then sued the engineering firm in a separate
action, “arguing that [the engineering firm’s] faulty advice to the
town had caused the festival to incur litigation costs and attorneys’
20 fees in the prior case that [it] should be entitled to recover” as a
measure of damages for its negligence claim. Id. The trial court
and a division of this court concluded that the festival was
precluded from recovering those damages because the festival had
been held partially liable in the underlying litigation, as evidenced
by the order directing it to pay $100,000 in water tap fees to the
town. Id. The supreme court disagreed with this reasoning, noting
that the mere fact that the festival had only prevailed on some
claims in the underlying action wasn’t a per se bar to recovery
under the rule from Brochner. Id. at 1075.
¶ 33 Specifically, the supreme court noted that its reference to the
absence of fault in Brochner must be understood in the context of
the circumstances of that case. Id. at 1072. In Brochner, the Rocky
Mountain Festivals, Inc., court observed, the hospital was a joint
tortfeasor with the doctor because it had breached its own duty of
care to the patient by failing to oversee the doctor after it found out
that he had been performing unnecessary brain surgeries. Id.
Accordingly, the hospital wasn’t entitled to the wrong-of-another
damages arising out of the underlying litigation because it was sued
for the “breach of its own duty of care to the patient, and all the
21 costs the hospital incurred were due to its own wrong, not that of
another.” Id. The supreme court explained that its discussion of
fault in Brochner was therefore not coextensive with the
determination of liability but, rather, was “akin to a proximate
cause determination, focusing on whether the underlying dispute
arose from the actions of the parties then litigating it, or whether
instead the dispute was thrust upon those litigants by some third
party.” Id.
¶ 34 After clarifying that the wrong-of-another damages analysis, in
part, turned on whether a party’s own conduct was a cause of the
underlying action, the supreme court considered whether the
festival was entitled to recover any costs and attorney fees, given
that it had partially caused the earlier action by failing to pay the
water tap fees. Id. at 1075. Because the court concluded that the
festival hadn’t caused the litigation pertaining to the wastewater
claim, the court considered whether that claim was segregable from
the water usage dispute, which the festival had caused. Id. The
court concluded that the claims were based on different facts and,
therefore, segregable because the engineering firm’s analyses of the
festival’s water and wastewater usage were “based on entirely
22 distinct analytical methods and evaluated separately during the
previous litigation.” Id. Accordingly, the court concluded that the
festival could potentially recover the amounts associated with the
wastewater claim that it hadn’t caused but not from the litigation
over water usage, which it had caused, at least in part. Id.
¶ 35 In short, Brochner and Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc. provide
that a party may pursue damages for litigation expenses arising out
of a separate dispute only if that party didn’t cause that dispute
through its own wrongful actions. Put another way, when a party
had to participate in a separate litigation because of its own
wrongdoing, the sought-after costs and attorney fees are deemed a
product of its own wrong, not that of another. This principle is
consistent with Colorado case law applying the wrong-of-another
doctrine to award costs and attorney fees for the litigation that a
party didn’t cause through its own conduct. See, e.g., Elijah, 674
P.2d at 948-52 (holding that property sellers were allowed to recover
from their real estate broker the attorney fees that they had
expended in a suit against a third party when the broker caused
that suit by breaching his fiduciary duties to the sellers); Stevens,
874 P.2d at 496-97 (holding that a commercial landlord was
23 entitled to recover from his broker the attorney fees that he had
incurred in a suit against a delinquent tenant when the broker
caused that suit “in considerable part” by failing to convey to the
landlord an offer the broker had received from a potential
third-party tenant).
¶ 36 With this rule in mind, we next consider whether Scholle had
a hand in having to defend himself in the underlying criminal
litigation due to his own wrongful conduct.
2. Any Error in Granting the Rule 56(h) Motion Was Harmless Because the Jury Found that Scholle Was at Fault for the Underlying Dispute
¶ 37 Scholle’s circumstances are distinguishable from those
present in Rocky Mountain Festivals, Inc., where the festival
prevailed on the wastewater claim but was held liable for its unpaid
water tap fees. 242 P.3d at 1070. Here, in contrast, the criminal
litigation and the wrong-of-another damages that Scholle seeks to
recover in the civil action arise from a single and indivisible set of
facts, those surrounding his shooting of Cotton.
¶ 38 As noted above, Scholle fully prevailed in the criminal case
because the jury acquitted him of all charges arising out of the
shooting. But in the civil trial underlying this appeal, the jury
24 found that Scholle’s actions — the same actions that resulted in the
shooting and his criminal prosecution — were wrongful.
Specifically, in its special verdict, the jury found the following:
• Scholle willfully or deliberately shot Cotton, and Scholle’s
conduct was “a cause of [Cotton’s] injuries, damages or
losses.”
• Scholle didn’t reasonably believe that he had to use deadly
force to protect himself, his wife, or his property from
Cotton or to prevent Cotton from committing a felony on his
property.
• Scholle didn’t tell Cotton to leave the property and “give him
a reasonable opportunity to leave” before shooting him in
the abdomen.
• Scholle used an unreasonable degree of force under the
circumstances that he faced during the incident.
¶ 39 Accordingly, even though the criminal jury acquitted Scholle
under the beyond a reasonable doubt standard of proof, the civil
jury in this case found by a preponderance of the evidence that his
shooting of Cotton was wrongful. That same wrongful conduct
underlies Scholle’s criminal prosecution and the attorney fees and
25 costs that he seeks to recover as a measure of damages. In other
words, Scholle’s own actions in the shooting incident led to his
criminal prosecution, at least in part; it was not merely thrust upon
him by Cotton’s conduct. See Elijah, 674 P.2d at 948-49; Stevens,
874 P.2d at 496. And considering the civil jury’s findings, Scholle
doesn’t explain — and we don’t see — how he could have recovered
wrong-of-another damages in any case. See Rocky Mountain
Festivals, Inc., 242 P.3d at 1072; Brochner, 724 P.2d at 1300.
¶ 40 Given these circumstances, we conclude that any error in the
trial court’s decision to not submit Scholle’s wrong-of-another
damages “claim” to the jury was harmless and, therefore, doesn’t
warrant reversal. See C.R.C.P. 61; C.A.R. 35(c); see also Terra
Mgmt. Grp., LLC v. Keaten, 2025 CO 40, ¶¶ 41-43 (concluding that
any error in the trial court’s order imposing an adverse inference
sanction against a party for the destruction of evidence didn’t
mandate reversal because the error was harmless).
III. Disposition
¶ 41 The judgment is affirmed.
JUDGE DUNN and JUSTICE MARTINEZ concur.