Sweet v. Dodson

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 2026
Docket25CA0324
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sweet v. Dodson (Sweet v. Dodson) 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.

Bluebook
Sweet v. Dodson, (Colo. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

25CA0324 Sweet v Dodson 05-07-2026

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 25CA0324 Arapahoe County District Court No. 20CV32068 Honorable Thomas Henderson, Judge

James Sweet and Mary Sweet,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

William Dodson and Janis Dodson,

Defendants-Appellees.

ORDER AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART, AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

Division VI Opinion by JUDGE SCHOCK Grove and Yun, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced May 7, 2026

First & Fourteenth PLLC, Julian R. Ellis, Jr., Colorado Springs, Colorado; First & Fourteenth PLLC, Michael Francisco, Washington, D.C., for Plaintiffs- Appellants

Snell & Wilmer, L.L.P., Byeongsook Seo, Denver, Colorado, for Defendants- Appellees ¶1 Plaintiffs, James and Mary Sweet (the Sweets), appeal the

order awarding attorney fees to defendants, William and Janis

Dodson (the Dodsons), under section 13-17-102, C.R.S. 2025. They

contend that the district court erred by (1) finding the action lacked

substantial justification; (2) failing to make required findings under

section 13-17-103(1), C.R.S. 2025; and (3) admitting evidence of

another property dispute between the Sweets and a neighbor.

¶2 We affirm the order to the extent the district court found

under section 13-17-102 that the Sweets brought or defended this

action, in whole or in part, without substantial justification. But we

conclude that the district court erred by failing to consider and

make findings concerning the factors in section 13-17-103(1) in

determining whether to assess attorney fees and the amount of fees

to be assessed. We therefore reverse the attorney fee order in part

and remand the case for the district court to make those findings.

I. Background

¶3 The Sweets and Dodsons are next-door neighbors. In 2015,

the Sweets began a major backyard renovation that would blur the

property lines between their property and the Dodsons’. The

Dodsons agreed to the project with certain conditions, including

1 that the property lines would not change and that the Sweets would

memorialize the arrangement in a written agreement.

¶4 The Sweets did not provide the Dodsons with a draft

agreement until the project was nearly complete. By then, the

neighbors’ relationship had become strained. The Dodsons refused

to sign the agreement because it included terms the parties had

never discussed while omitting terms they had agreed upon.

¶5 The Sweets then launched what the district court described as

a “campaign to pressure the Dodsons into executing later versions

of the [d]raft [a]greement.” That campaign escalated into conduct

that the district court characterized as “harassment and stalking.”

The Dodsons never signed the agreement and, in April 2020,

revoked their permission for the Sweets to enter their property.

A. Trial Proceedings

¶6 The Sweets sued the Dodsons, asserting claims for implied

easement, interference with easement, boundary establishment,

promissory estoppel, unjust enrichment, conversion, and civil theft.

At bottom, the Sweets claimed ownership of the landscaped area on

the Dodsons’ property and sought damages arising from the

Dodsons’ contrary claim. The Sweets also recorded a lis pendens

2 against the Dodsons’ property, prompting a lender to cancel the

Dodsons’ pending refinance application. The Dodsons responded

with counterclaims for quiet title, injunctive relief, fraud, abuse of

process, extreme and outrageous conduct, trespass, and nuisance.

¶7 The district court granted summary judgment or judgment on

the pleadings in favor of the Dodsons on all of the Sweets’ claims

except unjust enrichment. In its partial summary judgment order,

the court concluded: “The Sweets, as evidenced by their behavior

during this litigation, continue a crusade against the Dodsons that

can at best be characterized as misguided and at worst without

legal support and vexatious. The Sweets’ [r]esponse lacks citation

to the evidence and is filled with conclusory statements.”

¶8 The case went to a bench trial on the Sweets’ unjust

enrichment claim and the Dodsons’ counterclaims. The Sweets,

though represented by counsel when they filed the action, appeared

pro se at trial (as they had for summary judgment). After trial, the

court entered judgment in favor of the Dodsons on all claims,

granting their requested permanent injunction and awarding them

approximately $75,000 in damages. But it denied their request for

3 exemplary damages, finding that they had not proved beyond a

reasonable doubt that the Sweets’ conduct was willful and wanton.

¶9 The court also awarded the Dodsons their attorney fees and

costs under section 13-17-102, explaining as follows:

[T]he Sweets’ claims, defenses, and litigation tactics were “frivolous, substantially groundless, or substantially vexatious.” Indeed, this [c]ourt previously found the Sweets’ claims can “at best be characterized as misguided and at worst without legal support and vexatious.” . . . After hearing all the evidence at trial, the [c]ourt concludes that the Sweets’ claims were in fact largely without legal support and vexatious.

The court later determined the amount of the fee award to be

$476,229.74 — about $17,000 less than the Dodsons requested.

B. Sweet I

¶ 10 The Sweets appealed the judgment and the attorney fee award.

A division of this court affirmed the judgment but reversed the fee

award. Sweet v. Dodson, slip op. at ¶ 11 (Colo. App. No. 22CA1134,

Oct. 5, 2023) (not published pursuant to C.A.R. 35(e)) (Sweet I).

¶ 11 As to the merits of the parties’ claims, the division concluded

that the district court had correctly granted summary judgment on

the Sweets’ claims and ruled in favor of the Dodsons on their

4 counterclaims following trial. Although the division noted in a

couple places that the evidence at trial might have supported

contrary findings, it concluded that the district court’s findings

were amply supported by the record. See id. at ¶¶ 46, 59.

¶ 12 As to the attorney fee award, the division first noted that “[t]he

entirety of the trial court’s reasoning” for awarding attorney fees

consisted of the three sentences quoted above and that the later

order regarding the amount of fees “didn’t offer any additional

reasoning on the Dodsons’ entitlement to fees.” Id. at ¶ 80. The

division then concluded that the district court had erred by failing

to make the finding required by section 13-17-102(6) — that the

Sweets, as pro se parties, “clearly knew or reasonably should have

known that their claims and defenses were substantially frivolous,

substantially groundless, or substantially vexatious.” Id. at ¶ 81.

¶ 13 Thus, the division remanded the case to the district court to

“consider and make findings as to whether the Sweets clearly knew

or reasonably should have known that their claims and defenses

were substantially frivolous, substantially groundless, or

substantially vexatious and, thus, whether the Dodsons are entitled

to recover attorney fees under [section] 13-17-102.” Id. at ¶ 83.

5 C. Remand Proceedings

¶ 14 On remand, the Sweets filed a motion to determine the scope

of the attorney fee hearing. They argued that the hearing should

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Sweet v. Dodson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweet-v-dodson-coloctapp-2026.