Colorado Court of Appeals Opinions

September 28, 2021

2021 COA 124. No. 19CA1196. People v. Medina

2021 COA 124. No. 19CA1196. People v. Medina. Alford Plea—Waiver of Factual Basis of Charge—Due Process—Crim. P. 11.

Defendant was arrested and charged with felony menacing—real/simulated weapon. He entered into a plea under North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970), in which he waived the factual basis of the charge and pleaded guilty to the menacing charge with a stipulated one-year sentence in the custody of the Department of Corrections, in exchange for dismissal of charges in five other cases. Defendant later attempted to withdraw his plea. The court denied the motion and sentenced him in accordance with the plea agreement. Defendant then filed a motion for postconviction relief, which the court also denied.

On appeal, defendant argued that (1) due process required the district court to ensure that he intelligently concluded that his interests required entry of a guilty plea; and (2) because an Alford plea must be supported by “strong” record evidence, the district court erred by allowing defendant to waive this requirement. Under an Alford plea, a defendant maintains his or her innocence but nonetheless enters a guilty plea for the charged offense. This plea is permitted if a defendant intelligently concludes that it is in his or her interests to enter a guilty plea and the record before the judge contains strong evidence of actual guilt. A defendant may waive a judicial finding of a strong factual basis of actual guilt, and the waiver does not violate due process if a district court strictly complies with Crim. P. 11. Here, plea counsel’s waiver of the factual basis on defendant’s behalf at the providency hearing complied with Crim. P. 11, and the record supports defendant’s acceptance of the plea as knowing, voluntary, and intelligent. Further, defendant waived the factual basis through plea counsel to take advantage of the generous global disposition of his other cases because it served his interests.

The order was affirmed.

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2021 COA 125. No. 20CA0950. Johnson Nathan Strohe, P.C. v. MEP Engineering, Inc.

2021 COA 125. No. 20CA0950. Johnson Nathan Strohe, P.C. v. MEP Engineering, Inc. Limitation of Liability Clause—Contracts—Ambiguity.

Johnson Nathan Strohe, P.C. (architect) designed a building and contracted with MEP Engineering, Inc. (engineer) to provide mechanical, plumbing, and electrical engineering services for the building. The contract contained a clause limiting the engineer’s liability to $2,000 or twice the engineer’s fee, whichever was greater.

The architect alleged that as the building was nearing completion and the engineer was close to completing its work, the owner and architect discovered substantial problems with the building’s heating and hot water systems. The architect also alleged that the engineer admitted it erred and then designed and implemented repairs. Additional problems were subsequently discovered, and the architect hired another firm for those repairs.

The building owner initiated an arbitration proceeding against the architect regarding the heating and hot water systems, and the arbitrator awarded the owner $1.2 million in damages. The architect then sued the engineer for negligence and moved under CRCP 56(h) for a legal determination of the validity of the limitation of liability provision, claiming it was too vague and ambiguous to be enforceable. The district court found the provision unambiguous and enforceable. The engineer moved for leave to deposit twice its contractual fee plus interest into the court’s registry and for dismissal with prejudice. The district court granted the motion.

On appeal, the architect argued that the district court erred by concluding that the limitation of liability provision was clear and unambiguous. Here, the district court did not review this provision in its entirety, did not give effect to all parts of the provision, and did not address the clause stating that “such liability shall be limited . . . as consequential damages.” This clause is subject to several interpretations; for example, it could be interpreted to apply only to consequential damages, or it could mean that all damages caused by the engineer are consequential damages under the contract. Accordingly, the court erred in concluding that the liability limitation has a clear and unambiguous meaning.

The architect also argued that because the liability limitation clause was ambiguous, it was void. The Court of Appeals held that a limitation of liability in a commercial contract is not void merely because it is ambiguous. Rather, like other ambiguous contract provisions, the meaning is a question of fact that courts must determine using ordinary methods of contract interpretation.

The judgment dismissing the case with prejudice and the order authorizing the deposit of funds into the court registry was reversed. The court’s conclusion of law that the limitation of liability is unambiguous was also reversed. The court’s conclusion that it must employ ordinary methods of contract interpretation to determine the meaning of the limitation of liability clause was affirmed and the case was remanded to determine the meaning of the liability limitation clause as an issue of fact.

 

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