25CA0553 Winninger v Kirchner 05-14-2026
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 25CA0553 Eagle County District Court No. 17CV30102 Honorable Paul R. Dunkelman, Judge
Lindsay Winninger and Sports Rehab Consulting, LLC, a Colorado limited liability company,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Doris Kirchner,
Defendant-Appellee.
ORDER AFFIRMED
Division VII Opinion by JUDGE PAWAR Johnson and Gomez, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced May 14, 2026
Kildow & Braunschweig LLC, Sonya R. Braunschweig, Minneapolis, Minnesota, for Plaintiffs-Appellants
Fennemore Craig, P.C., John M. McHugh, Allison M. Hester, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellee ¶1 In this appeal, plaintiffs challenge the award of costs to
prevailing codefendant, Doris Kirchner, on the ground that the
costs were paid by and also necessary for the defense of
nonprevailing codefendant, Vail Clinic, Inc., d/b/a Vail Valley
Medical Center (Vail Health). We affirm.
I. Background
¶2 Plaintiffs, Lindsay Winninger and Sports Rehab Consulting,
LLC, filed claims against Vail Health and Kirchner, Vail Health’s
CEO. Vail Health, but not Kirchner, filed counterclaims against
plaintiffs. During much of the litigation, Kirchner and Vail Health
were represented by the same attorneys.
¶3 All the claims and counterclaims were unsuccessful —
plaintiffs’ claims were dismissed on summary judgment, and Vail
Health’s counterclaims were either voluntarily dismissed, dismissed
on summary judgment, or rejected by a jury.
¶4 Both Kirchner and Vail Health requested their costs as
prevailing parties. The district court determined that Kirchner was
a prevailing party because she prevailed on all the claims in which
she was a party (she successfully defended against all of plaintiffs’
claims). But the court determined that Vail Health was not a
1 prevailing party and therefore not entitled to costs because,
although it successfully defended against plaintiffs’ claims, its own
counterclaims failed.
¶5 The court then held a costs hearing. It recognized that Vail
Health had paid Kirchner’s costs — Vail Health agreed to indemnify
Kirchner for her costs because plaintiffs’ claims against her were
based on conduct undertaken in her professional capacity as Vail
Health’s CEO. The court also recognized that many costs incurred
by the Kirchner-Vail Health attorneys were incurred for the defense
of both codefendants.
¶6 Ultimately, the court ordered plaintiffs to pay Kirchner
$53,952.18 in costs. In its written order, the court found that all
the awarded costs were reasonable and necessary for Kirchner’s
defense, irrespective of whether they might have also been
necessary for Vail Health’s defense.
¶7 Plaintiffs appeal the cost award. As we understand it, they
argue that, even though Kirchner was a prevailing party, she was
ineligible for the award because at least some of the awarded costs
were also necessary to Vail Health’s defense, and Vail Health paid
2 the costs. We conclude that none of plaintiffs’ arguments warrant
relief.
II. Costs Award
¶8 We review a trial court’s costs award for an abuse of
discretion. Gallegos Fam. Props., LLC v. Colo. Groundwater Comm’n,
2017 CO 73, ¶ 37. However, we review a court’s interpretation of
statutes and rules in awarding costs de novo. Id.
¶9 C.R.C.P. 54(d) makes a prevailing party eligible to receive its
reasonable and necessary costs of litigation. Id. at ¶ 42. There is
no question that for costs to be awardable, they must have been
incurred by the prevailing party, not another party. But the fact
that “an insurer or other third party actually paid those . . . costs”
does not change the fact that the costs were incurred by the
prevailing party and, therefore, awardable to the prevailing party if
they were reasonable and necessary. Monell v. Cherokee River, Inc.,
2015 COA 21, ¶ 23; see Hale v. Erickson, 23 P.3d 1255, 1257 (Colo.
App. 2001).
¶ 10 As we understand it, plaintiffs do not challenge the district
court’s determination that the awarded costs were necessary (or
reasonable) for Kirchner’s defense. Instead, they argue that many
3 of those costs were also necessary for Vail Health’s defense, and
this fact should preclude those costs from being awarded to
Kirchner. As plaintiffs tell it, the court should have segregated out
the costs that were necessary to only Kirchner’s defense and
awarded only those costs. But plaintiffs cite no authority for this
proposition, and we are aware of none.
¶ 11 Moreover, the logic of such a proposition is unclear to us. We
fail to see why costs that would otherwise be awardable to the
prevailing codefendant could become unawardable because they
also happened to be necessary to the defense of a nonprevailing
codefendant. We therefore follow the well-established rule that a
prevailing party is entitled to the reasonable and necessary costs
they incur in litigation. See Gallegos, ¶ 42.
¶ 12 Also, the fact that Vail Health paid Kirchner’s costs is
irrelevant. Costs are incurred by a defendant even if they are
actually advanced or paid by a third party, like an insurer. Monell,
¶ 23; Hale, 23 P.3d at 1257. We see no reason to distinguish
between a third-party insurer and a third-party nonprevailing
codefendant — the fact remains that plaintiffs sued Kirchner as an
4 individual, distinct from Vail Health, and the trial court found that
she incurred costs in defending herself.
¶ 13 Finally, to the extent that plaintiffs attempt to characterize
Kirchner as a free rider on Vail Health’s proverbial litigation bus,
this analogy breaks down in light of the district court’s
unchallenged determination that the awarded costs were necessary
for Kirchner’s defense. That the costs might also have been
necessary for Vail Health’s defense does not make them any less
necessary for Kirchner’s. If plaintiffs did not want to be liable for
Kirchner’s costs, they should not have sued Kirchner and forced her
to incur costs to defend herself.
¶ 14 In sum, plaintiffs do not dispute the district court’s finding
that the awarded costs were reasonable and necessary for
Kirchner’s defense. Instead, they argue that the costs were
incurred by Vail Health because Vail Health paid them and were
also necessary for Vail Health’s defense. But the fact that Vail
Health paid the costs does not change the fact that they were
incurred by Kirchner. See Monell, ¶ 23; Hale, 23 P.3d at 1257. And
the fact that they might have also been necessary for Vail Health’s
defense did not make them any less necessary for Kirchner’s. We
5 therefore disagree that the court should have segregated the costs
as plaintiffs suggest and we reject plaintiffs’ challenge to the costs
award.
III. Appellate Costs and Attorney Fees
¶ 15 Lastly, Kirchner requests her costs and attorney fees incurred
in defending this appeal. We agree that she is entitled to her
appellate costs. See C.A.R. 39(a)(2) (“[I]f a judgment is affirmed,
costs are taxed against the appellant.”). But we decline to award
her appellate attorney fees.
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25CA0553 Winninger v Kirchner 05-14-2026
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 25CA0553 Eagle County District Court No. 17CV30102 Honorable Paul R. Dunkelman, Judge
Lindsay Winninger and Sports Rehab Consulting, LLC, a Colorado limited liability company,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Doris Kirchner,
Defendant-Appellee.
ORDER AFFIRMED
Division VII Opinion by JUDGE PAWAR Johnson and Gomez, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced May 14, 2026
Kildow & Braunschweig LLC, Sonya R. Braunschweig, Minneapolis, Minnesota, for Plaintiffs-Appellants
Fennemore Craig, P.C., John M. McHugh, Allison M. Hester, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellee ¶1 In this appeal, plaintiffs challenge the award of costs to
prevailing codefendant, Doris Kirchner, on the ground that the
costs were paid by and also necessary for the defense of
nonprevailing codefendant, Vail Clinic, Inc., d/b/a Vail Valley
Medical Center (Vail Health). We affirm.
I. Background
¶2 Plaintiffs, Lindsay Winninger and Sports Rehab Consulting,
LLC, filed claims against Vail Health and Kirchner, Vail Health’s
CEO. Vail Health, but not Kirchner, filed counterclaims against
plaintiffs. During much of the litigation, Kirchner and Vail Health
were represented by the same attorneys.
¶3 All the claims and counterclaims were unsuccessful —
plaintiffs’ claims were dismissed on summary judgment, and Vail
Health’s counterclaims were either voluntarily dismissed, dismissed
on summary judgment, or rejected by a jury.
¶4 Both Kirchner and Vail Health requested their costs as
prevailing parties. The district court determined that Kirchner was
a prevailing party because she prevailed on all the claims in which
she was a party (she successfully defended against all of plaintiffs’
claims). But the court determined that Vail Health was not a
1 prevailing party and therefore not entitled to costs because,
although it successfully defended against plaintiffs’ claims, its own
counterclaims failed.
¶5 The court then held a costs hearing. It recognized that Vail
Health had paid Kirchner’s costs — Vail Health agreed to indemnify
Kirchner for her costs because plaintiffs’ claims against her were
based on conduct undertaken in her professional capacity as Vail
Health’s CEO. The court also recognized that many costs incurred
by the Kirchner-Vail Health attorneys were incurred for the defense
of both codefendants.
¶6 Ultimately, the court ordered plaintiffs to pay Kirchner
$53,952.18 in costs. In its written order, the court found that all
the awarded costs were reasonable and necessary for Kirchner’s
defense, irrespective of whether they might have also been
necessary for Vail Health’s defense.
¶7 Plaintiffs appeal the cost award. As we understand it, they
argue that, even though Kirchner was a prevailing party, she was
ineligible for the award because at least some of the awarded costs
were also necessary to Vail Health’s defense, and Vail Health paid
2 the costs. We conclude that none of plaintiffs’ arguments warrant
relief.
II. Costs Award
¶8 We review a trial court’s costs award for an abuse of
discretion. Gallegos Fam. Props., LLC v. Colo. Groundwater Comm’n,
2017 CO 73, ¶ 37. However, we review a court’s interpretation of
statutes and rules in awarding costs de novo. Id.
¶9 C.R.C.P. 54(d) makes a prevailing party eligible to receive its
reasonable and necessary costs of litigation. Id. at ¶ 42. There is
no question that for costs to be awardable, they must have been
incurred by the prevailing party, not another party. But the fact
that “an insurer or other third party actually paid those . . . costs”
does not change the fact that the costs were incurred by the
prevailing party and, therefore, awardable to the prevailing party if
they were reasonable and necessary. Monell v. Cherokee River, Inc.,
2015 COA 21, ¶ 23; see Hale v. Erickson, 23 P.3d 1255, 1257 (Colo.
App. 2001).
¶ 10 As we understand it, plaintiffs do not challenge the district
court’s determination that the awarded costs were necessary (or
reasonable) for Kirchner’s defense. Instead, they argue that many
3 of those costs were also necessary for Vail Health’s defense, and
this fact should preclude those costs from being awarded to
Kirchner. As plaintiffs tell it, the court should have segregated out
the costs that were necessary to only Kirchner’s defense and
awarded only those costs. But plaintiffs cite no authority for this
proposition, and we are aware of none.
¶ 11 Moreover, the logic of such a proposition is unclear to us. We
fail to see why costs that would otherwise be awardable to the
prevailing codefendant could become unawardable because they
also happened to be necessary to the defense of a nonprevailing
codefendant. We therefore follow the well-established rule that a
prevailing party is entitled to the reasonable and necessary costs
they incur in litigation. See Gallegos, ¶ 42.
¶ 12 Also, the fact that Vail Health paid Kirchner’s costs is
irrelevant. Costs are incurred by a defendant even if they are
actually advanced or paid by a third party, like an insurer. Monell,
¶ 23; Hale, 23 P.3d at 1257. We see no reason to distinguish
between a third-party insurer and a third-party nonprevailing
codefendant — the fact remains that plaintiffs sued Kirchner as an
4 individual, distinct from Vail Health, and the trial court found that
she incurred costs in defending herself.
¶ 13 Finally, to the extent that plaintiffs attempt to characterize
Kirchner as a free rider on Vail Health’s proverbial litigation bus,
this analogy breaks down in light of the district court’s
unchallenged determination that the awarded costs were necessary
for Kirchner’s defense. That the costs might also have been
necessary for Vail Health’s defense does not make them any less
necessary for Kirchner’s. If plaintiffs did not want to be liable for
Kirchner’s costs, they should not have sued Kirchner and forced her
to incur costs to defend herself.
¶ 14 In sum, plaintiffs do not dispute the district court’s finding
that the awarded costs were reasonable and necessary for
Kirchner’s defense. Instead, they argue that the costs were
incurred by Vail Health because Vail Health paid them and were
also necessary for Vail Health’s defense. But the fact that Vail
Health paid the costs does not change the fact that they were
incurred by Kirchner. See Monell, ¶ 23; Hale, 23 P.3d at 1257. And
the fact that they might have also been necessary for Vail Health’s
defense did not make them any less necessary for Kirchner’s. We
5 therefore disagree that the court should have segregated the costs
as plaintiffs suggest and we reject plaintiffs’ challenge to the costs
award.
III. Appellate Costs and Attorney Fees
¶ 15 Lastly, Kirchner requests her costs and attorney fees incurred
in defending this appeal. We agree that she is entitled to her
appellate costs. See C.A.R. 39(a)(2) (“[I]f a judgment is affirmed,
costs are taxed against the appellant.”). But we decline to award
her appellate attorney fees.
¶ 16 Kirchner requests appellate attorney fees under section 13-17-
102(2), C.R.S. 2025, which provides for such an award for
defending an appeal that is substantially frivolous, substantially
groundless, or substantially vexatious. § 13-17-101.5(1), C.R.S.
2025. An appeal that advances a novel legal argument for which no
determinative authority exists is not frivolous, groundless, or
vexatious. See M Life Ins. Co. v. Sapers & Wallack Ins. Agency, Inc.,
962 P.2d 335, 338 (Colo. App. 1998).
¶ 17 At the core of plaintiffs’ appeal is the creative contention that
there is a meaningful difference between a third-party insurer who
pays a prevailing defendant’s costs and a nonprevailing codefendant
6 with overlapping costs who does the same. We found this argument
lacking in logic and supporting authority and ultimately rejected it.
But it is nonetheless an argument that, to our knowledge, has yet
to be squarely rejected by a Colorado court. Consequently, we
cannot say that it is substantially frivolous, groundless, or
vexatious. We therefore decline to award Kirchner her appellate
attorney fees.
IV. Disposition
¶ 18 The district court’s order awarding Kirchner costs is affirmed.
JUDGE JOHNSON and JUDGE GOMEZ concur.