Trugreen Companies, LLC v. Mower Bros. , 570 F. App'x 775 ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                       FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    July 2, 2014
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    TRUGREEN COMPANIES, LLC, a
    Delaware limited liability company;
    TRUGREEN LIMITED
    PARTNERSHIP, a Delaware limited
    partnership,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,
    v.                                                      No. 13-4105
    (D.C. No. 1:06-CV-00024-BSJ)
    MOWER BROTHERS, INC., a Utah                              (D. Utah)
    corporation; KEVIN D. BITTON,
    d/b/a Scotts Lawn Service, a Utah
    entity; GREENSIDE, LLC, a Utah
    limited liability company; KEVIN D.
    BITTON; JEAN ROBERT BABILIS;
    RYAN MANTZ; JASON HILLER;
    LARY GAYTHWAITE; JIM
    LEBLANC; JAMES CLOGSTON;
    RICK DEERFIELD; DAVID
    STEPHENSEN; DAVID VAN
    ACKER; MATT WALKER;
    SHANNON CHRISTENSEN; PAUL
    BROWER; JAMES MURRAY;
    RICHARD COFFMAN; TAMMY
    ROEHR; JESSICA SPENCER;
    MARGIE SMITH; ALFREDA
    EGBERT; JASON BECK,
    individually,
    Defendants - Appellants.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent except under the
    (continued...)
    Before HARTZ, EBEL, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
    Back in 2006 TruGreen managers felt betrayed when a handful of
    employees left to work for a rival lawn care company. TruGreen sued, charging
    its former employees with breaching their employment contracts. In the end, the
    company lost that claim and the victorious former employees — some based in
    Idaho, others in Utah — asked the court to order the company to pay their
    attorney fees and expenses. As these things go, the parties managed to consume
    as many years litigating that collateral question as they had the merits. When the
    dust finally settled, the district court decided to award $14,822 in fees to the
    Idaho defendants but nothing to the Utah employees. Now the employees ask us
    to overturn that decision and return the case to the district court for still more
    proceedings. That much we find we cannot lawfully do.
    We begin with the Utah employees’ argument that the district court
    should’ve awarded them attorney fees and expert expenses. The argument runs
    this way. Under the parties’ employment contract, TruGreen retained the right to
    seek “reimburse[ment]” from its employees for “all attorneys’ fees and costs
    *
    (...continued)
    doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited,
    however, for its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th
    Cir. R. 32.1.
    -2-
    incurred by [the company] in enforcing any of its [contractual] rights or
    remedies.” As written, of course, this provision benefitted only the company and
    not the employees. But as the employees rightly note, Utah’s reciprocal fee
    statute turns the parties’ contract from a one-way into a two-way street. Under
    the statute, both parties receive the benefit of any fee- and cost-shifting provision
    appearing in their contract — transforming patently one-sided deals like
    TruGreen’s into bilateral ones instead. See Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-826 (2012);
    Giusti v. Sterling Wentworth Corp., 
    201 P.3d 966
    , 980-81 (Utah 2009). In this
    way, the Utah employees submit, they were entitled to their attorney fees and
    expert costs and the district court erred by failing to recognize as much.
    The problem the employees face is this. Utah’s statute ensures only that
    both sides receive the benefit of a contractual fee-shifting provision — beyond
    guaranteeing reciprocity, the law doesn’t create any new rights. In other words,
    each party’s right to recover is the inverse of the other’s, no more and no less.
    See, e.g., PC Crane Serv., LLC v. McQueen Masonry, Inc., 
    273 P.3d 396
    , 407-08
    (Utah Ct. App. 2012); Hooban v. Unicity Int’l, Inc., 
    285 P.3d 766
    , 768 (Utah
    2012). And, as the district court explained, reading the contract at issue in this
    way still doesn’t help the employees’ cause. By its plain terms, the contract
    allows only reimbursement of fees and costs incurred. Meanwhile, under a deal
    the employees penned with their new employer, that company assumed sole
    liability for all of the employees’ litigation fees and costs. So it is that, as a
    -3-
    matter of plain language, the employees have incurred no fees or costs in this
    litigation — the bills in this case do not “run, flow, fall . . . devolve [or] accrue”
    to them but to someone else entirely. VII The Oxford English Dictionary 834-35
    (2d ed. 1989). And there is, quite literally, nothing to reimburse them for —
    nothing to “return to their purse.” See The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English
    Etymology 396 (T.F. Hoad ed., 1986). Utah’s statute gives the employees the
    same rights TruGreen has under the contract, but those rights don’t provide a
    windfall recovery to one side or another that just happens to be equal to fees and
    expenses someone else alone must pay.
    Having said that much, we pause to emphasize what we have not said and
    do not say. We don’t address the situation where a party remains legally liable
    for fees and costs even though someone else pays them. Neither do we address
    the situation where a party parts with consideration so that someone else (say, an
    insurer) will assume responsibility for litigation expenses. In those situations, we
    can imagine arguments that the party in question could still be “reimbursed” for
    fees and costs it “incurred.” But we don’t have to pass (and do not pass) on any
    of that in this case. In this case the employees are liable for nothing and —
    whether they might have been able to do so — they do not contend they parted
    with any consideration. In those circumstances alone, we agree with the district
    court that, as a matter of plain language, there are no “incurred” fees to be
    “reimbursed.”
    -4-
    To be sure, the employees argue that a handful of cases compel a different
    result. Most prominently, they rely on Centennial Archaeology, Inc. v. AECOM,
    Inc., 
    688 F.3d 673
     (10th Cir. 2012), interpreting Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(A), and
    Blum v. Stenson, 
    465 U.S. 886
     (1984), and Blanchard v. Bergeron, 
    489 U.S. 87
    (1989), both cases dealing with 
    42 U.S.C. § 1988
    . The employees stress that
    these cases did not require prevailing parties to pay any fees before becoming
    entitled to a fee recovery, even though the word “incurred” appears in the text of
    both Rule 37 and § 1988 just as it does in their contract.
    But the teachings of other cases about other statutes and rules do not —
    without more — necessarily dictate the proper interpretation of the parties’
    contract. In reaching the results they did, these other cases relied heavily on the
    particular linguistic context in which the word “incurred” appeared, as well as the
    animating purpose of the statute or rule at hand. And a good deal of that analysis
    is simply inapt here. For example, one might make a plausible case that Rule
    37’s sanctions provisions and the civil rights statutes embody a punitive policy —
    an intent to punish the wrongdoer — that warrants an especially broad reading of
    their terms. But it’s hard to see why we should impute a parallel policy to a
    routine employment contract. Certainly the employees have presented no
    persuasive argument for doing so.
    Confirming our conclusion on this score is the care with which the
    employees have (cherry) picked their cases. The employees point to cases
    -5-
    holding that the word “incur” — when read in context of the full statute or rule at
    issue — permits fee shifting even before a party has paid a fee. But plenty of
    other statutes containing the terms “reimburse” and “incur” have been interpreted
    as requiring the party who seeks fees to have a legal obligation to pay. And
    though each statute, rule, or contract must be interpreted according to its own
    terms, surely the combination of both “reimburse” and “incur” — present in our
    contract, as in these other contexts — does more than one term might do alone to
    suggest that something must come out of a party’s pocket before it can be
    returned there. See, e.g., In re Espy, 
    338 F.3d 1036
    , 1038-39 (D.C. Cir. 2003)
    (interpreting 
    28 U.S.C. § 593
    (f)(1)); Wisconsin v. Hotline Indus., Inc., 
    236 F.3d 363
    , 367 (7th Cir. 2000) (interpreting 
    28 U.S.C. § 1447
    (c)).
    For their part, the Idaho employees lodge a different sort of complaint.
    While the Utah employees must rest their appeal on the parties’ contract and
    Utah’s reciprocal fee statute, the Idaho employees enjoy the benefit of a state
    statute entitling them to a “reasonable” fee award. See 
    Idaho Code Ann. § 12
    -
    120(3). On this much everyone before us agrees — and for its part the district
    court agreed as well to award the Idaho employees $14,822 in fees.
    The Idaho employees say this award amounts to an abuse of discretion
    because their defense cost a good deal more. They point to the fact that the
    attorneys representing the Utah and Idaho employees collectively charged their
    new employer hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees. But however this might
    -6-
    be, when it came time to submit their fee application to the district court the
    Idaho employees segregated out only $14,822 as pertaining to their defense. It’s
    clear from the record, too, that the Idaho employees were well aware that their fee
    application stood in a different and arguably more favorable legal posture than the
    Utah employees’ — that they might recover and the Utah employees might not —
    and thus had every incentive to clarify the full amount of fees they thought
    attributable to their defense. Despite this, the Idaho employees offered the
    district court no methodology for allocating more fees and costs to them. And
    given that, we can hardly say the district court abused its discretion in issuing the
    award it did. Cf. United States v. Fields, 
    516 F.3d 923
    , 950 (10th Cir. 2008)
    (finding no abuse of discretion when party complains that the district court
    declined to take a course of action that it never proposed).
    Neither are we convinced that the district court abused its discretion in
    declining to award more expenses under the separate terms of Idaho R. Civ. P.
    54(d)(1)(D). That provision allows fee shifting only in “exceptional”
    circumstances. Before the district court, the plaintiffs made no effort to show
    their case met this high standard. And though they make the attempt in this court,
    that effort comes too late. See Schrock v. Wyeth, Inc., 
    727 F.3d 1273
    , 1284 (10th
    Cir. 2013) (holding similar argument waived).
    -7-
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Because they have not
    prevailed on any aspect of this appeal, the appellants’ request for their appellate
    fees is denied.
    ENTERED FOR THE COURT
    Neil M. Gorsuch
    Circuit Judge
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-4105

Citation Numbers: 570 F. App'x 775

Judges: Hartz, Ebel, Gorsuch

Filed Date: 7/2/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024