Tucker v. Volunteers of America Colorado Branch

211 P.3d 708, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 2087, 2008 WL 5006528
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 2008
Docket07CA0844
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 211 P.3d 708 (Tucker v. Volunteers of America Colorado Branch) 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
Tucker v. Volunteers of America Colorado Branch, 211 P.3d 708, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 2087, 2008 WL 5006528 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge GRAHAM.

In this premises liability action, plaintiff, Richard B. Tucker, who prevailed in a jury trial, appeals the amount of the judgment in his favor. First, he asserts error in the trial court's refusal to strike the affirmative defenses of comparative negligence and assumption of the risk pleaded by defendants, Volunteers of America Colorado Branch and Volunteers of America Foundation-Colorado. Second, he asserts that the trial court erred in reducing the judgment under the collateral source rule. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with directions.

In 2004, plaintiff was injured at a fundrais-ing event sponsored by defendants. Plaintiff then commenced this action under Colorado's Premises Liability Act (PLA), section 18-21-115, C.R.S.2008, alleging that defendants failed to exercise their duty of reasonable care owed to him as an invitee. In their answer to the complaint, defendants asserted the affirmative defenses of comparative negligence, section 18-21-111, C.R.S.2008, and assumption of the risk, section 18-21-111.7, C.R.98,2008, and also sought. reduction of any award to plaintiff under the collateral source rule, section 18-21-111.6, C.R.S.2008.

Before trial, plaintiff moved to strike the affirmative defenses of comparative negli *710 gence and assumption of the risk on the ground that they had been abrogated by the PLA. In support of his motion, plaintiff relied upon Vigil v. Franklin, 103 P.3d 322 (Colo.2004), which held that the PLA abrogated the common law defenses to duties owed by landowners.

The trial court denied the motion and defendants presented their defenses to the jury. .The jury returned a verdict in plaintiffs favor, awarding $60,000 for his non-economic damages and $81,385.88 for his economic losses. Because the jury also concluded that plaintiff was forty-nine percent at fault for his injuries, the trial court reduced plaintiffs award accordingly.

The trial court, applying section 13-21-111.6, further reduced plaintiffs award by the difference between the nonscheduled, or full, amount of plaintiff's medical bills, and the scheduled, or reduced, amount of the bills actually paid by plaintiff's health insurer. In other words, the court treated the disallowed portions of the medical bills as outside the seope of the collateral source contract exception and therefore subject to setoff against plaintiff's damages.

I.

On appeal, plaintiff first argues that the trial court erred in refusing to strike defendants' affirmative defenses of comparative negligence and assumption of the risk. Relying on Vigil, plaintiff argues that language added to the Act in 2006 makes clear that the defenses were not available prior to the statutory amendment. We disagree.

We review this issue de novo. People v. Renander, 151 P.3d 657, 659 (Colo.App.2006).

In 2006, the General Assembly amended the PLA by adding the following sentence: "Sections 18-21-111 [comparative negligence], 13-21-111.5 [pro rata liability of defendants or nonparties at fault], and 13-21-111.7 [assumption of the risk] shall apply to an action to which this section applies." § 13-21-115(2), C.R.98.2008. By its express terms, the amendment applies to all causes of action aceruing "on or after the effective date of this act." Ch. 107, see. 2, 2006 Colo. Sess. Laws 344. The effective date of the act was April 5, 2006. This cause of action accrued prior to that date.

When the General Assembly amends a statute, it is presumed, unless rebutted, that the General Assembly intends to change the statute and not merely to clarify an ambiguity in it. City of Colorado Springs v. Powell, 156 P.3d 461, 465 (Colo.2007).

Prior to the amendment, the PLA had been silent with respect to the applicability of these affirmative defenses to actions pursued under it. Nonetheless, in Martin v. Union Pacific R.R. Co., 156 P.3d 61 (Colo.2007) (cert. granted June 30, 2008), a division of this court concluded that prior to the amendment, only defenses to duties could be raised by a landowner who was sued under the PLA, which defenses were to be distinguished from affirmative defenses, such as comparative fault. Id. at 64-65; cf. Vigil, 103 P.3d at 324 n. 2.

The division in Martin also ruled that the 2006 amendment to the PLA constituted a change in the law as opposed to a clarification of the law, and because Martin's claim accrued prior to the effective date of the amendment, the division found it "must conclude that defendants were foreclosed from asserting these defenses." Martin, 186 P.3d at 66. According to Martin, the affirmative defenses of comparative negligence and assumption of the risk therefore were not available in premises liability cases arising prior to their express inclusion by the General Assembly. Id.

Later, a second division of this court analyzed Vigil and concluded that its "narrow holding did not address the effect of statutory defenses or defenses unrelated to duties of the landowner, such as the defense of comparative negligence." DeWitt v. Tara Woods Ltd. P'ship, 214 P.3d 466, 468, 2008 WL 4592122 (Colo.App. No. 06CA2006, Oct. 16, 2008). The DeWitt division also concluded that the PLA and the statutorily prescribed defense of comparative negligence were parts of a comprehensive treatment of damages adopted by the General Assembly in article 21 of title 18. Reading the statutory scheme as a whole and giving harmonious effect to its various parts, the division in DeWitt rea *711 soned that statutory defenses to liability, such as comparative negligence, were not abrogated by the PLA and, consequently, the 2006 amendment merely clarified prior law.

In contrast, the division in Martin reasoned that the PLA was ambiguous, and on this basis concluded that the 2006 amendment was a change based upon what the General Assembly had previously and incorrectly determined to be the holding in Vigil. In doing so, it appears that the Martin division interpreted the 2006 amendment as creating the very problem it was designed to correct, that is, as establishing that common law defenses had been abrogated by the PLA before the 2006 amendment.

We consider the analysis in DeWiit to be persuasive because the division's reading of Vigil comports with our own. Based upon Vigil, we interpret the PLA as the General Assembly's unambiguous creation of a comprehensive act which specifies the exclusive duties of landowners to those injured on their property. The PLA, in our view, does not exclusively limit defenses and does not abrogate statutorily created defenses, which were available to landowners before the 2006 amendment and afterward. Thus, we conclude that the trial court correctly allowed defendants' affirmative defenses of comparative negligence and assumption of the risk. The jury properly considered plaintiff's comparative fault for his injuries, and the jury's award of damages to plaintiff was properly reduced by the percentage of fault attributable to him.

IL.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 P.3d 708, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 2087, 2008 WL 5006528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-volunteers-of-america-colorado-branch-coloctapp-2008.