PROFESSIONAL RODEO, ETC. v. Wilch, Smith & Brock
This text of 589 P.2d 510 (PROFESSIONAL RODEO, ETC. v. Wilch, Smith & Brock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PROFESSIONAL RODEO COWBOYS ASSOCIATION, INC., a Colorado Nonprofit Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee and Cross-Appellant,
v.
WILCH, SMITH & BROCK, a partnership, John J. Smith, Roy E. Brock, Jr., Donald E. Gwinn, Defendants-Appellants and Cross-Appellees.
Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. I.
*511 Holland & Hart, Jane Michaels Talesnick, John D. Coombe, Edward M. Giles, Denver, for plaintiff-appellee and cross-appellant.
Yegge, Hall & Evans, Eugene O. Daniels, Denver, for defendants-appellants and cross-appellees.
BERMAN, Judge.
This suit was brought by the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association, Inc. (PRCA) against Wilch, Smith & Brock, a partnership, and three individual partners therein (Accountants), for damages for malpractice by the Accountants.
The PRCA is a nonprofit corporation whose members are rodeo cowboys. The PRCA sanctions rodeos and keeps records of its members' winnings. At the conclusion of each rodeo season the PRCA employs outside accountants to verify the records of the cowboys' winnings. After this audit the PRCA invites the top fifteen cowboys in each event to the National Finals Rodeo and, at the conclusion thereof, crowns the World's Champion All-Around Cowboy. The champion is that cowboy who has won the most prize money in sanctioned rodeos for the entire season.
In 1975, as in prior years, the Accountants were employed by the PRCA to verify the cowboys' winnings. Based on this verification, and the results of the National Finals Rodeo, it was determined that Leo Camarillo had beaten Tom Ferguson for the championship by approximately $100. Camarillo was therefore crowned champion. Several weeks later Ferguson questioned the accuracy of the audited PRCA records, and it was determined that the Accountants had made two errors which, if corrected, showed that Ferguson was entitled to the championship. This led to a dispute between Camarillo, Ferguson, and the PRCA as to who was entitled to the championship. To settle this dispute it was agreed that the two cowboys would be declared co-champions and that the PRCA would award prizes and money to Ferguson equal to those which had been given to Camarillo. As part of this settlement the PRCA also agreed to pay the expenses and attorneys' fees that the cowboys had incurred.
The PRCA then filed this action to recover the money paid by the PRCA in settling the dispute and for $200,000 for loss to its business reputation. The latter claim was dismissed by the trial court at the conclusion of the PRCA's case. The jury found that the Accountants were negligent, that such negligence was a proximate cause of the PRCA's claimed damages, that the PRCA was not contributorily negligent, and that the amount of damages sustained by the PRCA and proximately caused by the Accountant's negligence was $43,600.98. *512 Both plaintiff and defendants have appealed this judgment. We modify the judgment, and, as so modified, affirm.
I. Issues on Appeal
Defendants first argue that plaintiff failed to establish a prima facie case of negligence or of proximate cause and that therefore the trial court erred in denying defendants' motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of plaintiff's case. We disagree.
In passing upon a motion for a directed verdict the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion is directed, and "[t]he issue is for the jury when the evidence is such that different conclusions might be drawn by fair minded men . . .." Safeway Stores, Inc. v. Langdon, 187 Colo. 425, 532 P.2d 337 (1975).
Here, during plaintiff's case there was both expert testimony that defendants' failure to detect the two errors was a breach of their duty of care, and competent testimony that the effect of these errors was "the erroneous naming of the world champion cowboy." Therefore, the trial court properly denied defendants' motion for a directed verdict. Furthermore, since the evidence was sufficient to support the jury's findings of negligence and proximate cause, those findings must be affirmed. See Colorado-Wyoming Ry. v. Wheelock Bros., Inc., 155 Colo. 406, 395 P.2d 1 (1964).
Defendants next argue that the trial court erred in denying defendants' motion, made at the commencement of trial, to strike plaintiff's claim for loss to business reputation. We disagree.
Defendants' motion was based on allegedly insufficient responses by plaintiff to an interrogatory regarding the amount of plaintiff's damages. Defendants, however, did not avail themselves of the remedies provided in C.R.C.P. 37, and therefore, they may not now complain that the responses were deficient. See Moses v. Moses, 180 Colo. 397, 505 P.2d 1302 (1973).
In refusing to strike this claim, the trial court stated as follows:
"It's premature for the Court to determine at this time whether or not damages are sustained; that will have to be determined after the Court hears the evidence."
The trial court acted properly in refusing to strike plaintiff's claim until after it heard the evidence with respect thereto.
Defendants, in effect, argue that even if the court was not in error in refusing to strike this claim at the commencement of trial, error was committed in failing to strike the evidence which had been admitted in support of this claim when, at the close of plaintiff's case, the court did dismiss the claim.
They contend that the evidence introduced in support of the claim was prejudicial to them and affected the jury's determination of liability and damages. We find defendants' position to be without merit. Except for a videotape of the television show of the National Finals Rodeo, the documentary evidence in support of the business reputation claim was not shown to the jury before the claim was dismissed. And the videotape itself did not relate solely to the matter of business reputation. Rather the announcer's statement, at the end of the show, that a dispute existed as to which of the two top contenders was in fact the "champion," also tended to show that plaintiff's behavior in settling the dispute was reasonable.
Nor did the defendants, when they renewed their motion to strike at the close of plaintiff's case, specifically designate that evidence which they sought to have stricken. And, their failure to fulfill their obligation in this respect precludes them from basing prejudicial error on this aspect of the trial. See Mosko v. Matthews, 87 Colo. 55, 284 P. 1021 (1930); Webber v. Emmerson, 3 Colo. 248 (1877).
Instead of showing any actual prejudice in support of this contention, defendants rely on cases which hold that the introduction of inadmissible evidence over objection is presumed prejudicial unless it affirmatively *513 appears that it was not. E. g., Mangus v. Miller, 35 Colo.App. 335, 535 P.2d 219, cert. dismissed, 189 Colo. 481, 569 P.2d 1390 (1975). However, since the trial court granted defendants' motion to strike the claim when it was renewed at the close of plaintiff's case, that presumption does not exist. Cf. David v. Gilbert, 85 Colo. 184, 274 P. 821 (1929).
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589 P.2d 510, 42 Colo. App. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/professional-rodeo-etc-v-wilch-smith-brock-coloctapp-1978.