Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc. v. Church

381 P.2d 459, 152 Colo. 278
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 13, 1963
DocketNo. 19,938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 381 P.2d 459 (Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc. v. Church) 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
Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc. v. Church, 381 P.2d 459, 152 Colo. 278 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice McWilliams.

This is the second time this controversy has been reviewed by this Court.

Ruby Shaffer, as the next friend of her minor grandson, Lawrence Edward, brought an action on his behalf against Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc., a Colorado Corporation, and one Kerr, alleging that on April 7, 1956, a horse named Smokie, owned and under the control of [280]*280one or both of the defendants, came onto the property owned by Ruby Shaffer and her husband, George; that Smokie’s unauthorized entry onto the Shaffer property constituted a trespass quare clausum fregit, and that while thus trespassing Smokie kicked Lawrence Edward in the face, thereby inflicting grievous personal injuries for which claim was made in the amount of $92,000.

The first trial came to a halt when at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the trial court granted a motion to dismiss interposed by each of the defendants. As to Kerr, the basis for the dismissal was a determination by the trial court that the evidence failed to establish that Kerr either “owned” Smokie, or had the horse in his “control, care or custody.” As to the other defendant, Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc., the basis for the dismissal was that the plaintiff was barred from recovery because the Shaffers had failed to “fence out” Smokie with a fence meeting the requirements of C.R.S. ’53, 8-13-1.

On review this judgment of dismissal was affirmed as it pertained to Kerr, but was reversed as to the defendant, Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc., and the cause was remanded with directions to grant a new trial, “permitting the parties to amend their pleadings as they may be advised.” See Robinson v. Kerr, et al., 144 Colo. 48, 355 P. (2d) 117, the subject case for an extended annotation on the general subject of liability for personal injury caused by trespassing livestock appearing in 88 A.L.R. (2d), beginning at page 705.

Before the second trial of this matter Harris Park Lakeshore, Inc., (hereinafter referred to as the defendant) and counsel who had theretofore represented it terminated their relationship, and the defendant then employed present counsel to defend the action. Neither litigant elected to amend the pleadings, though the defendant through its new counsel sought to rid itself of all admissions entered into by its prior counsel in the form of a pre-trial conference order and supplemented [281]*281by certain additional stipulations agreed to by the parties before the commencement of the first trial. This the trial court declined to do, and the propriety of its ruling will be discussed in greater detail, infra.

Although the first trial was to a jury, the litigants just before the start of the second trial waived their right to trial by jury and by agreement the case was tried to the court. This second trial culminated in a judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant in the amount of $31,000 plus interest thereon from the date the action was instituted. By appropriate order motion for new trial was dispensed with, and by writ of error the defendant now seeks reversal of the judgment.

The defendant initially contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain the findings of the trial court and specifically urges that plaintiff failed to “establish his case in trespass.” In this regard the trial court found that a horse named Smokie and belonging to the defendant trespassed onto the Shaffer property, and while so trespassing kicked and injured Lawrence Edward, who at the instance of his grandfather was then in the act of shooing the horse off the property. The court further found that under all the circumstances seven-year-old Lawrence Edward was as a matter of fact free from negligence.

At the outset it should be noted that in determining the sufficiency of the evidence in a trial to the court, we are not concerned with the fact that evidence which is technically inadmissible may have been erroneously received into evidence. Rather, we are searching the record to ascertain if there be competent evidence, independent of any testimony which may have been improperly received, which will support the findings and conclusions of the trial court. See Vanadium Corporation of America v. Wesco Stores Company, 135 Colo. 77, 308 P. (2d) 1011. Hence, defendant’s suggestion that certain testimony was improperly received is to no avail, even though correct, if there otherwise be [282]*282competent evidence to support the judgment. Our examination of the record convinces us that the various findings and conclusions of the trial court are amply supported by competent evidence.

Before briefly reviewing the evidence, it is deemed appropriate at this juncture to state that in our view the trial court under the circumstances disclosed by the record did not err in refusing to countermand the pretrial conference order and stipulation entered into by the litigants before the first trial of this matter. Before the first trial there was a rather elaborate written pretrial conference order, which was supplemented by certain verbal admissions made in open court just prior to the commencement of the actual trial. One such admission on the part of the defendant was that as of April 7, 1956, it did in fact own a horse named Smokie.

Before the second trial, present counsel for defendant in effect asked the trial court to release it from all of the pre-trial admissions antedating the first trial. No reason was advanced by the defendant why this request should be granted. The trial court denied the request, and rightly so.

Rule 16, Colo. R.C.P., declares that a pre-trial conference order shall govern and control “the subsequent course of the action, unless modified at the trial to prevent manifest injustice.” The rule contains no language limiting its application to the “first” trial only of a case. The defendant here made no showing that the order and stipulation worked any “manifest injustice,” in the sense that it had, for example, stipulated to something as being a fact which in truth it was not. Rather, this appears to be nothing but an instance where new counsel for the defendant, as a matter of trial strategy, determined if possible to adopt a policy of “admit nothing,” and require its adversary to “prove all.” Such tactic is completely at odds with both the spirit and letter of the Rules of Civil Procedure, and the trial court quite properly declined to go along therewith. In sup[283]*283port of the proposition that a change in counsel is not sufficient in and of itself to justify vitiating a pre-trial conference order or an admission made in open court and a part of the record, see King v. Edward Hines Lumber Company, 68 Fed. Supp. 1019.

Did the plaintiff prove his case in trespass? We hold that he did. The defendant by way of pre-trial stipulation admitted that as of April 7, 1956, it owned a horse named Smokie. Plaintiff’s witness Kerr identified exhibit A as being a picture of two horses, one of which was owned by him and a second horse which “looked like” Smokie and which he “understood” belonged to the defendant. Kerr, a former defendant in the case, was understandably a somewhat reluctant witness, and even though on cross-examination he declared he was not “absolutely positive,” certainly the trial court was justified in concluding from his testimony that the aforementioned exhibit depicted, inter alia, a horse bearing the name Smokie and belonging to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
381 P.2d 459, 152 Colo. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-park-lakeshore-inc-v-church-colo-1963.