Denver Electric & Neon Service Corp. v. Gerald H. Phipps, Inc.

354 P.2d 618, 143 Colo. 530, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 613
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedAugust 8, 1960
Docket18884
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 354 P.2d 618 (Denver Electric & Neon Service Corp. v. Gerald H. Phipps, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Denver Electric & Neon Service Corp. v. Gerald H. Phipps, Inc., 354 P.2d 618, 143 Colo. 530, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 613 (Colo. 1960).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Doyle

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Denver Electric and Neon Service Corporation instituted this action in the district court of the City and County of Denver naming as defendants Gerald H. Phipps, Inc., the Boley Electric Company, the Union National Bank and The First National Bank of Denver. The trial court granted motions of The First National Bank to dismiss. Thereafter, in its amended complaint, the defendant First National Bank of Denver was not named. The motion to dismiss of Gerald H. Phipps, Inc., *532 directed to the amended complaint was granted in a hearing before a different judge. The plaintiff electing to stand on this ruling seeks review of the judgment of dismissal in this Court.

The facts as disclosed by the complaint and the amended complaint show that Gerald H. Phipps, Inc., issued two checks payable to Denver Electric and drawn on The First National Bank of Denver. The first check was dated July 14, 1955, and was in the amount of $8,296.95. The second check was issued on August 8, 1955, and was in the amount of $6,679.94. It is alleged that these checks were negligently delivered by Phipps to the Boley Electric Company and that company endorsed and deposited the checks in its own account; that Union National Bank credited the Boley Electric Company account in the amounts of the checks and that The First National Bank paid these checks notwithstanding neither had been endorsed by the Denver Electric Company, the payee.

There is a total of 9 separate claims in the original complaint. In claims 1 and 2, the facts as summarized above are alleged and a demand is made against Boley Electric Company, Union National Bank and First National Bank of Denver for the proceeds of the two checks. Claims 3 and 4 describe negligence actions against Gerald H. Phipps, Inc., Union National Bank and First National Bank. These are predicated on the alleged negligence of the parties in, first, misdelivering the two checks and, secondly, paying them without the endorsement of the payee — plaintiff. The 5th and 6th claims pursue a conversion theory against Boley Electric Company, Union National Bank and First National Bank. In claims 7 and fi an effort is made to impose a trust upon the proceeds of the two checks against Boley Electric Company. Claim 9 merely alleges an indebtedness based upon an account stated by Phipps for the total sum represented by the two checks.

The Honorable Joseph M. McDonald granted the mo *533 tion of the First National Bank for dismissal and at the same time denied the like motion of Phipps. The amended complaint, the sufficiency of which is presented on this review, is substantially the same as the original complaint except that plaintiff apparently acceded to the dismissal of the First National Bank from the action by dropping it as party defendant. In any event, a new motion to dismiss addressed to the amended complaint was filed by Phipps. Hearing on this motion was before the Honorable H. Joe Rawlinson. At this hearing, the motion of Phipps, which attacked the 3rd, 4th and 9th claims, was granted.

In seeking a reversal of the judgment of dismissal as to Phipps, Denver Electric urges two points.

First, that the ruling of Judge McDonald denying Phipps’ motion to dismiss addressed to the original complaint precluded Judge Rawlinson from entertaining the identical motion and arriving at a contrary conclusion.

Secondly, that (assuming that Judge Rawlinson was empowered to hear the motion to dismiss) the court erred in dismissing the 3rd, 4th and 9th claims because the allegations contained in these claims were valid and sufficient.

I.

Was it error for the trial court to entertain and grant the motion to dismiss claims 3, 4 and 9 with respect to which the same court, acting through another judge, had previously denied such motion?

The issue here raised must be considered in the light of C.R.S. ’53, 37-4-18. This section provides:

“Powers of judges sitting separately. — While sitting separately, the courts held by the several judges, each of them shall be known as the district court of the county wherein and wherefor such court may be held, and shall have the same power to vacate or modify its own judgments, decrees or orders rendered or made while so held, as if the said court were composed of a single judge; provided, that neither of said judges shall *534 have power to vacate or modify a judgment, decree or order rendered or made by another judge of the same court.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Does the italicized proviso of the above section prevent renewal of a motion to dismiss in circumstances like the present ones? We think not. There is no exact governing precedent. In Rice v. Van Why, 49 Colo. 7, 111 Pac. 599 (decided without reference to the above statute), it was contended that a ruling by one judge of the district court sustaining a motion to strike allegations in the complaint was interlocutory and that another judge of the same court was empowered to reconsider the motion and deny it. In distinguishing between orders interlocutory and orders final in nature, the Court declared:

“ * * * It will scarcely be denied that the court, at any time before trial and final judgment, had the power, if convinced of error, to correct the same as it might be advised. The ruling on the motion to strike was not of such a final or conclusive character as to preclude the action taken, even after the expiration of the term. It was the same court acting at all times, and as such it clearly had this power, and might properly exercise it. The fact that a different judge was sitting worked no limitation upon the power and authority of the court. We doubt if it will be questioned that the judge who made the original order had the right, if exercised in apt time, to change his mind and withdraw or modify it, if advised, as matter of law, that such action was due the plaintiff. If this be true, and it seems reasonable, it follows that another judge, presiding over the same court, having like power and authority, might also properly make a like order.”

Rice v. Van Why, supra, was cited with approval in the recent case of Epstein v. Denver, 133 Colo. 104, 293 P. (2d) 308. Here the right of the trial judge to receive evidence at the trial which had been excluded at preliminary proceedings before the .presiding judge of the *535 same court was upheld. Speaking through Mr. Justice Knauss, the Court disposed of the question by declaring:

“ * * * Counsel for Respondents now urge that under C.R.S. ’53, 37-4-18 Judge McWilliams, trial judge, was obligated to follow the ruling of the presiding judge on the admissibility of evidence as to the 1950 sale price of the subject property. The ruling of the presiding judge was a preliminary or interlocutory order only. It was not embodied in any pre-trial order entered in the case. It was a ruling and not ‘a judgment, decree or order rendered or made by another judge of the same court,’ which is prohibited by C.R.S. ’53, 37-4-18.

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354 P.2d 618, 143 Colo. 530, 1960 Colo. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denver-electric-neon-service-corp-v-gerald-h-phipps-inc-colo-1960.