Klun v. Klun

2019 CO 46, 442 P.3d 88
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 3, 2019
DocketSupreme Court Case 18SA266
StatusPublished
Cited by177 cases

This text of 2019 CO 46 (Klun v. Klun) 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
Klun v. Klun, 2019 CO 46, 442 P.3d 88 (Colo. 2019).

Opinion

JUSTICE GABRIEL delivered the Opinion of the Court.

*90 ¶1 Defendant Michael Klun appeals the water court's order denying his motion for attorney fees after he prevailed on all claims brought against him in the underlying action by plaintiffs Thomas Klun and Joseph Klun, Jr. (because the parties are brothers and share the same last name, we will consistently refer to Michael Klun as "defendant" and Thomas Klun and Joseph Klun, Jr., as "plaintiffs," even though in the initial litigation between them, which we discuss below, their roles were reversed). Defendant here asserts that he is entitled to recover his attorney fees pursuant to a fee-shifting provision of a prior settlement agreement (the "Settlement Agreement") between him and plaintiffs.

¶2 The fee-shifting clause at issue provided that the prevailing party in an action to enforce, by any means, any of the terms of the Settlement Agreement shall be awarded all costs of the action, including reasonable attorney fees. Here, plaintiffs' claims, in substance, sought relief based on allegations that defendant had breached the terms of the Settlement Agreement, and defendant responded by arguing that it was plaintiffs' claims that were inconsistent with that Agreement. In these circumstances, we conclude that plaintiffs' claims constituted an effort to enforce the terms of the Settlement Agreement. Indeed, consistent with this conclusion, plaintiffs themselves had asserted a claim for fees pursuant to the fee-shifting clause at issue.

¶3 Accordingly, we hold that defendant, as the prevailing party on all claims below, is entitled to recover his attorney fees pursuant to the Settlement Agreement's fee-shifting clause, and we therefore reverse the water court's order denying an award of such fees and remand this case for a determination of the trial and appellate fees to be awarded to defendant.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶4 In 2011, defendant sued plaintiffs for dissolution and winding up of their family-held partnership, Klun Farm & Cattle, which owned certain farm property and associated shares of water stock.

¶5 Several months later, the parties reached a mediated settlement in which plaintiffs agreed to buy out defendant's interest in the partnership, including defendant's interest in the farm property and associated shares of water stock. Plaintiffs ultimately did not fulfill their obligations under this settlement, however, and over the next two years, defendant filed four motions in the Pueblo district court to enforce the settlement. These proceedings culminated in 2014, when the court entered a money judgment against plaintiffs in excess of $1.6 million and ordered defendant to convey the farm property and water shares to plaintiffs upon payment in full by plaintiffs. The court also awarded attorney fees to defendant based on plaintiffs' "groundless and frivolous defense and obdurate litigation behavior."

¶6 Several weeks later, plaintiffs filed petitions in bankruptcy seeking reorganization under Chapter 11. Defendant participated in the bankruptcy proceedings as plaintiffs' largest unsecured creditor.

¶7 The parties subsequently resolved the bankruptcy proceedings by entering into a memorandum of understanding that was subsequently finalized into the Settlement Agreement at issue. As pertinent here, section 2 of the Settlement Agreement required plaintiffs to convey their entire interest in three parcels of land (parcels A, B, and C), as well as the shares of water stock associated with those parcels, to defendant. Section 7 provided, in pertinent part, "The Parties acknowledge that all existing right away [sic] accesses remain unaffected." In section 10, the parties represented and warranted that they had neither made nor caused to be made "any encumbrances, liens or other interests on the Property to be transferred." And section 13(a) included, as pertinent here, a fee-shifting clause that entitled the prevailing *91 party in any action to enforce the Settlement Agreement, regardless of the means of enforcement, to an award of costs, including reasonable attorney fees. In consideration of plaintiffs' representations and contractual promises, defendant agreed to provide plaintiffs with a full release and to file an appropriate satisfaction of judgment and dismissal of all remaining claims against plaintiffs. Pursuant to the Settlement Agreement, plaintiffs conveyed parcels A, B, and C to defendant by general warranty deed.

¶8 Prior to the Settlement Agreement, the parties' family farm had been operated as a single unit. The fragmentation effectuated by the Settlement Agreement almost immediately led to conflicts and confrontations among the parties. According to plaintiffs, shortly after signing the Settlement Agreement, defendant, contrary to property lines that were acknowledged and acquiesced to for over fifty years, began preventing plaintiffs from accessing head gates, valves, and ditch roads that they needed to access to irrigate their property, and defendant allegedly damaged a divider box weir to divert extra water into his lateral. In addition, plaintiffs alleged that defendant had dug up plaintiffs' pipeline at a head gate and permanently removed an air vent, shut-off valve, and Alfalfa Valve. Plaintiffs further claimed that defendant moved the shut-off valve onto his property, constructed a new road and large berm on the southern property line of his parcel, and excluded plaintiffs from all ingress and egress on the parcels that were transferred to defendant under the Settlement Agreement.

¶9 In light of the foregoing, and based on their view that under the express terms of the Settlement Agreement, they had retained all historical rights of ingress and egress, including access to all valves, head gates, and ditch roads on all parcels whether they were exchanged or not, plaintiffs filed the present action in the water court. In this action, plaintiffs asserted claims for (1) a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction precluding defendant from denying plaintiffs reasonable historical access to the head gate that was the sole access point to the only lateral that provided irrigation water to plaintiffs' farm land; (2) a declaration that defendant shall not limit reasonable access to head gates and valves historically used to irrigate plaintiffs' farm operation, shall not exclude plaintiffs from historical easements affecting plaintiffs' farm operation, and shall remove the above-referenced berm, which plaintiffs alleged restricted the natural flow of irrigation water on which plaintiffs relied; (3) conversion of plaintiffs' personal property by taking possession of plaintiffs' air vent, valves, and pipeline, among other property, as well as by diverting plaintiffs' water from the newly constructed diverter box; and (4) trespass by destroying and restricting access to plaintiffs' property without legal right or plaintiffs' consent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 CO 46, 442 P.3d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klun-v-klun-colo-2019.