CC of Baltimore Co. v. Patient First Corp. , 219 Md. App. 69 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •           UNREPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 568
    September Term, 2013
    BOARD OF TRUSTEES,
    COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF
    BALTIMORE COUNTY
    v.
    PATIENT FIRST CORPORATION
    Eyler, Deborah S.,
    Graeff,
    Moylan, Charles E., Jr.
    (Retired, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Opinion by Graeff, J.
    Filed: August 29, 2014
    This case arises from an agreement between Patient First Corporation (“Patient
    First”), appellee, and the Board of Trustees of the Community College of Baltimore County
    (“CCBC”), appellant, pursuant to which Patient First allowed CCBC students to gain
    “supervised clinical experience” as phlebotomists at Patient First centers in the Baltimore
    area. The agreement contained an indemnification provision, which provided that CCBC
    would indemnify Patient First for any liability arising from negligent acts of CCBC students.
    On January 13, 2007, a CCBC student phlebotomist at a Patient First clinic
    accidentally stuck herself with a needle and then drew blood from a child using the
    contaminated needle. As a result of the ensuing lawsuit by the child’s family, Patient First
    was required to pay $10,000 to settle the case.        Patient First sought to enforce the
    indemnification provision of the agreement to recover its payment, as well as the attorneys’
    fees incurred in defending the negligence action. The circuit court found that CCBC
    breached the agreement by failing to indemnify Patient First for its costs. It awarded
    $87,097.08, consisting of $10,000 paid toward the settlement of the lawsuit and the
    remainder toward attorneys’ fees.
    On appeal, CCBC presents two questions for our review, which we have rephrased
    slightly, as follows:
    1.        Did the circuit court err in determining that the indemnification
    provision of the agreement required CCBC to indemnify Patient First
    for its defense of the negligence action?
    2.        Did the circuit court abuse its discretion in allowing testimony
    regarding the reasonableness of Patient First’s attorneys’ fees, and
    in awarding attorneys’ fees based on that testimony?
    For the reasons set forth below, we shall affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On September 12, 2003, CCBC and Patient First entered into an Agreement for
    Clinical Program - Venipuncture (the “Agreement”). Pursuant to the Agreement, Patient
    First would provide a “supervised clinical experience” for students in CCBC’s venipuncture
    program, and CCBC would maintain “professional liability insurance that covers the
    Venipuncture Students and [CCBC] faculty in the Program in the amounts of $1,000,000 per
    occurrence and $3,000,000 in the aggregate.” The Agreement, which was drafted by CCBC,
    also contained a section entitled “Indemnification,” which provided, in pertinent part, as
    follows:
    7.1       [CCBC] will defend, indemnify, and hold [Patient First] harmless
    from any and all losses, claims, liabilities, damages, costs and
    expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) which arise out of
    the negligent acts or omissions of [CCBC], its agents, employees, or
    Venipuncture Students in connection with this Agreement. . . . The
    obligations of [CCBC] under this subparagraph 7.1 are subject to and
    limited by its liability under Section 5-301 et [s]eq. [a]nd 5-519,
    Courts and Judicial Proceedings, Annotated Code of Maryland, as
    amended.
    It is further understood and agreed that [CCBC] is not waiving or
    relinquishing in any manner any defenses that may be available to
    [CCBC] including, but not limited to, government sovereign
    immunity or breach of contract or otherwise, nor is [CCBC]
    relinquishing any defenses that may become available to it at any
    time during the term of this Agreement, but that [CCBC] is free to
    assert all defenses that may be available to it at law or in equity.
    -2-
    On January 13, 2007, Morgan Ebaugh, a CCBC student working as a student
    phlebotomist at a Patient First clinic pursuant to the Agreement, drew blood from a six-year-
    old patient, Dimitris Politis (“Dimitris”), after she first stuck herself with the needle she was
    using. Ms. Ebaugh subsequently tested positive for Hepatitis C. Dimitris was then tested for
    a year, but he did not test positive for Hepatitis C.
    On December 14, 2009, Susan Politis, Dimitris’ mother, filed suit, individually and
    as parent and next friend of Dimitris, against Patient First, Patient First’s affiliates, and
    Ms. Ebaugh. The complaint asserted that Ms. Ebaugh “acted as an actual and/or apparent
    agent, servant and employee of” Patient First. It further asserted that the defendants,
    including both Patient First and Ms. Ebaugh, owed a duty of care, which included “the
    performance of a simple blood draw without injury and the protection of the Plaintiffs from
    contaminated needles.” On March 16, 2011, the parties reached a settlement agreement, in
    which Patient First agreed to pay $10,000 toward the $50,000 agreed upon.
    Pursuant to the Agreement, Patient First requested that CCBC indemnify it for
    Ms. Ebaugh’s negligence and reimburse Patient First for the $10,000 in settlement funds, as
    well as its attorneys’ fees in defending the lawsuit. CCBC refused Patient First’s request for
    indemnification.
    Patient First subsequently filed suit for breach of contract, alleging that CCBC’s
    “failure to indemnify Patient First as required by Paragraph 7.1 of the Agreement constitutes
    -3-
    a breach of the Agreement.”1 Patient First sought $88,937.39 in damages, consisting of the
    $10,000 settlement payment and $78,937.39 in costs and attorneys’ fees.
    On August 25, 2011, CCBC filed its answer to Patient First’s Amended Complaint,
    generally denying liability for breach of contract. Although CCBC admitted that the student
    was negligent, it asserted in its answer that “[t]he contract does not indemnify [Patient First]
    against its own negligence,” and “[t]o construe the contract to indemnify [Patient First] for
    its own negligence would violate public policy.”
    On June 25, 2012, both parties filed motions seeking summary judgment. In its
    motion, CCBC argued that Patient First was “not entitled to indemnification for its own
    admitted negligence,” asserting that Patient First was negligent in supervising Ms. Ebaugh
    at the time she performed the needle stick on Demitris. It contended that it would be “against
    public policy to uphold Patient First’s breach of contract claim for indemnification for its
    own admitted negligence and the costs of defending itself from a claim based on that
    negligence.”
    Patient First argued that “the plain language of the Agreement require[d] CCBC to
    indemnify Patient First,” noting that it was undisputed that Ms. Ebaugh was a Venipuncture
    1
    Patient First’s original Complaint was filed June 29, 2011. The Board of Trustees
    of the Community College of Baltimore County (“CCBC”) filed a Motion to Dismiss,
    asserting, in pertinent part, that the complaint failed to state a claim against the Community
    College of Baltimore County because that was not an entity subject to suit. Accordingly, on
    August 19, 2011, Patient First filed its Amended Complaint naming the Board of Trustees
    of CCBC as the defendant.
    -4-
    Student under the Agreement, that she was negligent, and that Patient First incurred losses,
    costs, and expenses in defending the lawsuit that resulted from Ms. Ebaugh’s negligence.
    It disagreed with CCBC’s argument that it was not entitled to indemnification because of
    negligence in supervising Ms. Ebaugh, asserting that Paragraph 7.1 of the Agreement “does
    not except circumstances where Patient First is allegedly negligent.”
    On August 24, 2012, the court denied both motions, noting that, although it was
    undisputed that Ms. Ebaugh “performed a negligent act” while working as a student
    phlebotomist at Patient First, it was not “sufficiently clear as to whether there was negligence
    or not in supervision of [Ms.] Ebaugh at the time she was negligent in performing a vein
    puncture.” The court concluded that, because there was “a dispute of material facts,” and due
    to the “absence of specifics sufficient to allow [it] to conclude that either party is correct in
    its assertions,” summary judgment was not proper.
    On January 11, 2013, Patient First filed a motion in limine to “exclude any evidence
    or legal argument by [CCBC] that Patient First’s claims are barred because of its own
    negligence.” It asserted that CCBC “could not point to any facts that constituted Patient
    First’s negligence other than its alleged failure to supervise [Ms.] Ebaugh – which was not
    required by the parties’ Agreement.” It argued that any negligence on its part was not
    relevant, and in any event, CCBC could not prove that it was negligent, asserting that expert
    testimony is required to establish negligence, and CCBC had “failed to identify any expert.”
    -5-
    Patient First argued that, without expert testimony that it was negligent, CCBC should be
    excluded from introducing evidence or legal argument in that regard.2
    Trial began on April 10, 2013. Melanie Mendoza, the Medical Director of the Patient
    First facility where Ms. Ebaugh performed the needle stick on Dimitris, ordered blood work
    to be performed on Dimitris during his visit on January 13, 2007.3 She informed Ms. Politis
    that someone would come to draw the blood, and she left the room to see other patients.
    Dr. Mendoza’s expectation was that a “lab person” who was a Patient First employee would
    come to the room and draw Dimitris’ blood.
    Because the results of the blood test were taking a while, Dr. Mendoza returned to the
    examination room to check with Ms. Politis regarding whether blood had been drawn.
    Ms. Politis informed Dr. Mendoza that, during the blood draw, the phlebotomist stuck herself
    with the needle she was attempting to use on Dimitris. Dr. Mendoza went to the lab, where
    she learned that Ms. Ebaugh was the person who attempted Dimitris’ blood draw. Prior to
    visiting the lab, Dr. Mendoza was unaware that there was a student phlebotomist working
    that day.
    When Dr. Mendoza asked what had happened during the blood draw, Ms. Ebaugh told
    her that she used a butterfly needle and “grazed herself” with the needle. She saw blood on
    the needle, so she threw it away and used a second needle to attempt once again to draw
    2
    The court reserved its ruling on the motion in limine.
    3
    At the time of trial, Dr. Mendoza was the Medical Director of a different Patient
    First facility.
    -6-
    Dimitris’ blood, but she was unsuccessful. Dr. Mendoza returned to the room and told
    Ms. Politis what she learned from Ms. Ebaugh. Ms. Politis told Dr. Mendoza that she only
    saw Ms. Ebaugh use one needle.        Dr. Mendoza then checked the needle box in the
    examination room and found only one needle inside.
    After Dr. Mendoza informed Ms. Ebaugh that she had observed only one needle in
    the needle box, Ms. Ebaugh admitted that she had used the same needle that she stuck herself
    with on Dimitris. At Dr. Mendoza’s direction, Ms. Ebaugh obtained a blood test. She tested
    positive for Hepatitis C. Dr. Mendoza did not know whether Dimitris was tested for
    Hepatitis C.
    On cross-examination, Dr. Mendoza agreed that performing a blood draw on a six-
    year-old child “is much more difficult than doing a blood draw on an adult,” and it required
    experience. Dr. Mendoza felt confident when she ordered the blood draw that “whoever
    draws the blood knows what they are doing drawing the blood.” It was her understanding
    that student phlebotomists working at Patient First were supervised by Patient First lab
    technicians when they performed blood draws, and “the lab techs and nurses and medical
    assistants are there to supervise them and help them.” Dr. Mendoza testified that she was not
    responsible for supervising Ms. Ebaugh.4
    4
    As CCBC notes in its brief to this Court, this response contradicts Patient First’s
    responses to discovery, in which it indicated that, “[a]t the time of the Politis incident,
    [Ms.] Ebaugh was under the general supervision of Dr. Mendoza.”
    -7-
    Lisa Baldwin, Director of Training for Patient First, signed the Agreement. She
    explained that, under the Agreement, Patient First did not agree to supervise or observe “each
    and every needle stick.” With respect to supervision of CCBC students, Ms. Baldwin
    explained Patient First’s policies and practices as follows:
    [W]hen we got a student from [CCBC], we would have the student observe the
    person that was working with them for phlebotomy sticks and then we would
    . . . observe the student while they performed the phlebotomy sticks. Once the
    student was deemed competent, then we would allow the student to then go
    and perform venipunctures and they were to come back to us if they had any
    issues, and they could go to the medical assistants, the nurses, lab.
    Based on the indemnification provision of the Agreement contained in Paragraph 7.1,
    Ms. Baldwin understood that if a CCBC student “had any issues or caused any problems, that
    the school would be held responsible and deal with all of those issues.” 5
    Stephen McCoy, Vice President and General Counsel for Patient First, testified that,
    after being served with the complaint filed by Ms. Politis in January 2010, Patient First
    retained counsel, Hancock, Daniel, Johnson, & Nagle, P.C. (the “Hancock Firm”), to defend
    it in the litigation. After the Politis litigation was resolved via settlement in January 2011,
    the firm sent Patient First a bill for $87,097.08, which included $10,000 for Patient First’s
    portion of the settlement and $77,097.08 for attorneys’ fees and costs. Mr. McCoy stated that
    5
    Patient First offered into evidence CCBC’s Response to its Request for Admissions,
    in which CCBC admitted that “Patient First had no contractual obligation to CCBC to
    personally observe CCBC Venipuncture students during each and every needle stick,” and
    “[e]ach clinical site determines the necessary level of supervision, depending on the patient.”
    -8-
    the amount Patient First was billed and paid was “slightly less” than the amount sought as
    damages in Patient First’s complaint.    Patient First paid the bill.
    On cross-examination, Mr. McCoy agreed that the complaint in the Politis litigation
    alleged that Patient First was negligent in supervising Ms. Ebaugh. Accordingly, the
    settlement funds, attorneys’ fees, and costs associated with the litigation were expended in
    order to defend against the allegation that Patient First’s negligence caused Dimitris’
    damages. In the settlement agreement reached in the Politis litigation, Patient First did not
    admit liability and denied all allegations of negligence.
    At the conclusion of Patient First’s case, CCBC moved for judgment on the grounds
    alleged in its motion for summary judgment. The court denied CCBC’s motion.
    CCBC’s first witness was Lane Miller, Coordinator of Allied Health for CCBC. As
    coordinator, Mr. Miller oversaw the phlebotomy program, and one of his duties included
    setting up clinical assignments for students. He was responsible for contacting local
    healthcare providers to inquire whether they would participate in a program providing
    clinical experience to CCBC phlebotomy students. He contacted Patient First regarding a
    potential partnership and met with Ms. Baldwin.
    Before the Agreement was signed, Mr. Miller met with Ms. Baldwin twice, during
    which they discussed the type of supervision that would be provided to CCBC students. The
    first few days of the clinical externship, CCBC students would shadow Patient First staff, and
    then, once the student was accomplished and the site supervisor was confident with that
    -9-
    student, “the student would then begin to do their own blood draws with the direct
    supervision from Patient First.” After the supervisor observed the student, “the student could
    then work independently.”
    Mr. Miller and Ms. Baldwin also discussed “hard sticks,” which referred to blood
    draws for “any children under the age of ten, any elderly patient and any obese patient
    because it’s typically harder to get a successful draw from those patients.” Mr. Miller’s
    understanding from his conversations with Ms. Baldwin was that CCBC students would not
    do a hard stick, or “if a decision was made that a hard stick was to be drawn by our [student],
    that they would have a direct supervisor over their shoulder in case there [were] any
    complications.” This understanding was not put in writing.
    Mr. Miller believed that the supervision arrangement he described at trial was what
    was meant by the term “supervised clinical experience” in Paragraph 1.1 of the Agreement.
    On cross-examination, he clarified that it was not his understanding that Patient First
    promised that a Patient First employee would observe “each and every needle stick.”
    Students participating in the CCBC program were required to work 80 hours and
    perform at least 100 successful needle sticks. Ms. Ebaugh was scheduled to work at Patient
    First Monday through Friday, from 5:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., and one weekend shift. At the
    time of the Politis incident, Ms. Ebaugh had completed 25-30 hours at Patient First. After
    the incident, Ms. Ebaugh sent an e-mail to Mr. Miller stating that she did not wish to
    -10-
    continue with the phlebotomy program. She did not respond to his requests that she come
    in and discuss the incident.
    Michelle Jancewski, Director of Health and Human Services and Workforce
    Development at CCBC, supervised Mr. Miller when he was in charge of the phlebotomy
    program. With respect to CCBC’s Agreement with Patient First, her understanding was that
    Patient First “would supervise the student so that the student and patient were safe,” and that
    CCBC students would not perform difficult needle sticks. She understood that Patient First
    employees would supervise CCBC students performing ordinary needle sticks.                 She
    acknowledged, however, that CCBC admitted, in response to Patient First’s request for
    admissions, that “Patient First had no contractual obligation to [CCBC] to personally observe
    the students during needle sticks.” She also acknowledged that, during her deposition as a
    corporate designee of CCBC, she agreed that the Patient First clinical sites came up with
    their own guidelines for supervision, depending on the patient.
    Charles Andrews, an adjunct faculty member at CCBC, testified that he taught
    phlebotomy courses at the college, and Ms. Ebaugh was one of his students. In his
    experience as a preceptor, he had never allowed a venipuncture student to do a blood draw
    on a six-year-old child.
    Melissa Hopp, CCBC’s Vice President of Administrative Services, testified that,
    pursuant to the Agreement, CCBC obtained professional liability insurance for its students
    -11-
    participating in the program. After the Politis lawsuit was filed, CCBC notified the insurer,
    and the “[i]nsurance kicked in to defend [Ms.] Ebaugh.”
    As a result of the lawsuit, Ms. Hopp received a letter from Patient First asking CCBC
    to indemnify it for its costs in defending the lawsuit. Ms. Hopp spoke with Patient First’s
    counsel, and she advised that they would not indemnify Patient First. She explained that
    indemnification was not required because “we judged that they were negligent” in their
    supervision of Ms. Ebaugh, “and they were asking us to pay for their negligence.” It was her
    understanding that, pursuant to the Agreement, Patient First was to “supervise [CCBC]
    students, to observe and instruct them and to prevent those students from committing errors
    or . . . from being unsafe.”
    At the conclusion of CCBC’s case, counsel for CCBC read into evidence Patient
    First’s answer to a question in CCBC’s first set of interrogatories, in which CCBC asked if
    Ms. Ebaugh was under supervision by any agent, servant, or employee of Patient First
    Corporation at the time of the incident alleged in the lawsuit filed by Susan Politis. Patient
    First responded: “At the time of the Politis incident, [Ms.] Ebaugh was under the general
    supervision of Dr. Mendoza.”
    Prior to issuing its ruling, the court heard closing argument from the parties. Patient
    First argued that the indemnification provision in Paragraph 7.1 clearly applied because the
    Politis lawsuit against Patient First was based on Ms. Ebaugh’s negligence. With respect to
    CCBC’s argument that Patient First was negligent in supervising Ms. Ebaugh, it argued that
    -12-
    there was “no sufficient allegation in the Politis Complaint that stands alone as a negligence
    claim against Patient First independent of [Ms.] Ebaugh’s actions in sticking the child with
    the same needle.” Patient First contended that, without expert testimony establishing its
    negligence, there was no basis on which the court could determine that Patient First was
    prohibited from enforcing the indemnification provision due to its own negligence.
    CCBC argued that, pursuant to Paragraph 7.1 of the Agreement, which provided that
    CCBC was not waiving any defenses to Patient First’s claim for indemnification, it could
    successfully defend against Patient First’s claim based on Patient First’s own negligence in
    supervising Ms. Ebaugh. Specifically, it asserted that it was “black letter law” that a party
    was not required to indemnify another party for its own negligence. CCBC contended that
    the Politis complaint was based on Patient First’s own negligence, as well as Ms. Ebaugh’s,
    and if Patient First had employed the proper supervision, “we wouldn’t be standing here
    today because [Ms.] Ebaugh would not have been allowed to do the draw.” CCBC asserted
    that the testimony of Dr. Mendoza, the person responsible for supervising Ms. Ebaugh, that
    she was unaware that a student phlebotomist was in the building, “ends the case right there.”
    The court ruled in favor of Patient First, explaining its ruling as follows:
    When you look at this cause of action, the broadest reading of the Complaint
    that was filed, alleges very clearly negligence on the part of the student and
    nobody disputes that, and it alleges liability on the part of Patient First for
    respondeat superior because the student was their actual or apparent agent and
    I think that still would fall within the indemnification . . . . But the
    indemnification piece really depends on . . . where the liability rests. It’s not
    just what was alleged but what’s the basis for liability. . . . So it comes down
    -13-
    to me whether there was adequate proof in this case that there was an
    independent breach of, you know, a duty by Patient First.
    With respect to CCBC’s argument that “there was a failure to supervise and clearly
    that’s what caused this,” the court stated:
    [T]his Agreement was very non-specific about what the supervised clinic was
    supposed to be, and everybody who looked at it after the fact had a slightly
    different view of what supervised meant, including the people who were
    operating in the clinic at times, but there was no meeting of the minds or
    understanding of what the supervision obligation is for venipuncture students
    in a Patient First clinic.
    The court agreed with Patient First that, to determine whether Patient First breached
    the appropriate standard of care, “some expertise” was required because it was not “apparent
    on [the] face” of the Agreement. Because the court did not “know what the standard is,” it
    could not “independently determine whether Patient First breached it,” and “[t]hat leaves me
    with liability being established based upon the breach by [Ms.] Ebaugh herself but a question
    mark as to whether the evidence is sufficient to show a breach by Patient First.” The court
    concluded: “For that reason, all I’m left with is something that clearly falls under the
    Indemnification Provision in this contract.” Accordingly, it awarded Patient First “the
    $87,097.08[,] which was the $10,000 paid in settlement plus the attorney’s fees in the third
    party action.”
    On April 30, 2013, the court filed a written order reflecting its oral ruling. This timely
    appeal followed.
    -14-
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a bench trial “on both the law and the evidence,” and we “will not set aside
    the judgment of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly erroneous, and will give due
    regard to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.” Md.
    Rule 8-131(c). “‘A factual finding is clearly erroneous if there is no competent and material
    evidence in the record to support it.’”      Hillsmere Shores Improvement Ass’n, Inc. v.
    Singleton, 
    182 Md. App. 667
    , 690 (2008) (quoting Hoang v. Hewitt Ave. Assocs., LLC, 
    177 Md. App. 562
    , 576 (2007)). “When the ruling of a trial court requires the interpretation and
    application of Maryland case law,” however, “we give no deference to its conclusions of
    law.” Elderkin v. Carroll, 
    403 Md. 343
    , 353 (2008). As the Court of Appeals has explained,
    “[t]he interpretation of a written contract is a legal question subject to de novo review by the
    appellate courts.” Calomiris v. Woods, 
    353 Md. 425
    , 447 (1999).
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    Indemnification Provision
    CCBC contends that “the circuit court erred as a matter of law in awarding Patient
    First indemnification damages,” asserting that a party can recover contractual indemnity for
    its legally culpable conduct only if the contract contains clear and unequivocal language
    indemnifying the party for its own negligence, which the Agreement here did not do. It
    argues that the circuit court erroneously put the burden of showing Patient First’s negligence
    -15-
    on CCBC, asserting that Patient First had the burden to show that CCBC had a contractual
    obligation to indemnify it for its own loss.
    Patient First acknowledges that, in the absence of unequivocal language, there
    generally is a presumption against indemnification for a service provider’s own negligence.
    It contends, however, that the circuit court properly ruled in its favor for two reasons. First,
    it argues that, before reaching the issue of whether the presumption against indemnification
    applied, CCBC had to prove that Patient First was negligent, which it failed to do in the
    absence of expert testimony regarding the standard of care. Second, it argues that, even if
    CCBC did prove that Patient First was negligent, based solely on the allegations in the Politis
    Lawsuit, the presumption against indemnification for a party’s own negligence is
    inapplicable here because there was no evidence that CCBC “was the type of unwary or
    uninformed Indemnitor that the presumption was designed to protect,” and the language used
    in the Agreement was sufficient to show that it applied to the provider’s own negligence.
    Initially, we note that CCBC does not dispute that Ms. Ebaugh was negligent, and
    under the plain language of the Agreement, CCBC would be required to indemnify Patient
    First for Ms. Ebaugh’s negligence. CCBC contends, however, that there is an exception to
    this requirement, relying on its assertion that Patient First was negligent in its supervision of
    Ms. Ebaugh and the general rule that “‘contracts will not be construed to indemnify a person
    against his own negligence unless an intention so to do is expressed in those very words or
    in other unequivocal terms.’” Kreter v. Healthstar Communications, Inc., 
    172 Md. App. 243
    ,
    -16-
    254 (2007) (quoting Crockett v. Crothers, 
    264 Md. 222
    , 227 (1972)). Accord Heat & Power
    Corp. v. Air Products & Chemicals, Inc., 
    320 Md. 584
    , 593 (1990) (where “contract did not
    expressly or unequivocally indemnify [the plaintiff] against its own negligence, the circuit
    court judge was correct in ruling as a matter of law that [the defendant] had no contractual
    duty to indemnify [the plaintiff]”).
    The contract here did not contain express language that CCBC would indemnify
    Patient First for its own negligence.6 Before CCBC can rely on the presumption against
    indemnification for the indemnitee’s own negligence, however, there must be a determination
    6
    As indicated, the indemnification provision at issue provides as follows:
    7.1      [CCBC] will defend, indemnify, and hold [Patient First] harmless from
    any and all losses, claims, liabilities, damages, costs and expenses
    (including reasonable attorneys’ fees) which arise out of the negligent
    acts or omissions of [CCBC], its agents, employees, or Venipuncture
    Students in connection with this Agreement. . . . The obligations of
    [CCBC] under this subparagraph 7.1 are subject to and limited by its
    liability under Section 5-301 et [s]eq. [a]nd 5-519, Courts and Judicial
    Proceedings, Annotated Code of Maryland, as amended.
    It is further understood and agreed that [CCBC] is not waiving or
    relinquishing in any manner any defenses that may be available to
    [CCBC] including, but not limited to, government sovereign immunity
    or breach of contract or otherwise, nor is [CCBC] relinquishing any
    defenses that may become available to it at any time during the term of
    this Agreement, but that [CCBC] is free to assert all defenses that may
    be available to it at law or in equity.
    (Emphasis added).
    -17-
    whether Patient First was negligent. In determining this question, a critical issue is who had
    the burden to prove the negligence or lack of negligence of Patient First.
    Although there does not appear to be a Maryland case directly on point, other courts
    have addressed the issue and held that, where an indemnitor seeks to deny payment on the
    ground that the indemnitee was negligent, that is an affirmative defense that the indemnitor
    must prove. See Norddeutscher Lloyd v. Jones Stevedoring Co., 
    490 F.2d 648
    , 649 (9th Cir.
    1973) (indemnitor bore burden of proof of establishing that indemnitee’s negligence
    precluded its recovery under indemnification agreement); Grubb & Ellis Mgmt. Servs., Inc.
    v. 407417 B.C., L.L.C., 
    138 P.3d 1210
    , 1215 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2006) (“[Indemnitor’s]
    contention that [indemnitee] was grossly negligent is in the nature of an affirmative defense,”
    and “[t]he proponent of an affirmative defense has the burden of pleading and proving it.”);
    N. Little Rock Elec. Co. v. Pickens-Bond Const. Co., 
    485 S.W.2d 197
    , 199 (Ark. 1972)
    (where indemnitor asserted “the affirmative defense that [the indemnittee] was guilty of
    negligence,” the court noted the absence of “satisfactory authority which would place the
    burden on [the indemnittee] to establish that they were free of negligence”); Tesoro
    Petroleum Corp. v. Nabors Drilling USA, Inc., 
    106 S.W.3d 118
    , 126 (Tex. App. 2002) (“A
    claim that a contractual exclusion precludes indemnity is an affirmative defense.”).
    We agree with this analysis. We hold that an indemnitor who seeks to avoid payment
    under an indemnity agreement, based on the presumption against indemnification for a
    party’s own negligence, has the burden to prove the indemnitee’s negligence. Accordingly,
    -18-
    the circuit court properly focused on whether CCBC established that Patient First was
    negligent.
    In finding that CCBC failed to show that Patient First was negligent, the court found
    that there was not a meeting of the minds between the parties regarding the supervision
    requirement. It stated:
    CCBC’s argument . . . is that there was a failure to supervise. . . . and for me
    to then figure out what is the standard of care in that context and whether it
    was breached . . . requires something other than individual people’s opinions
    on what it should be[.] [I]t required some expertise because it’s not something
    that’s apparent on its face. . . . I don’t know what the standard is and, therefore,
    I can’t independently determine whether Patient First breached it.
    We agree with the circuit court’s analysis. Expert testimony generally is required to
    establish a professional standard of care for a negligence claim, unless the negligence is
    obviously proven. Schultz v. Bank of America N.A., 
    413 Md. 15
    , 19 (2010). The party
    alleging negligence “‘bears the burden of overcoming the presumption that due skill and care
    were used.’” 
    Id. at 29
    (quoting Crockett v. Crothers, 
    264 Md. 222
    , 224 (1972)).
    We are not persuaded by CCBC’s argument that the allegations in the Politis lawsuit
    that Patient First was negligent were sufficient to meet CCBC’s burden of proof. See Tesoro
    Petroleum 
    Corp., 106 S.W.3d at 125
    (“Facts . . . not allegations, determine an indemnitor’s
    duty to indemnify. The duty to defend may be triggered by the pleadings, but the duty to
    indemnify is based on the jury’s findings.”). Without a jury finding that Patient First was
    -19-
    negligent, or any other evidence of Patient First’s negligence, the circuit court properly found
    that CCBC was required to indemnify Patient First.7
    II.
    Damages
    CCBC next argues that the circuit court abused its discretion in allowing Mr. McCoy,
    Patient First’s General Counsel, “to testify about the reasonableness of the Hancock firm’s
    fees, and it clearly erred in awarding $77,097.08 in attorneys’ fees based on that deficient
    testimony.” In support, it argues that Mr. McCoy was not identified, or qualified, as an
    expert, but the court allowed him to “express an opinion as to whether the bill [was]
    reasonable.” It asserts that Mr. McCoy’s “scant and conclusory opinion testimony” was
    insufficient to prove that Patient First was entitled to attorneys’ fees where there was no
    testimony regarding the reasonableness of the rates charged or the work done.
    Patient First argues that Mr. McCoy “was competent to testify to the reasonableness
    of the Hancock fees,” and “the trial court did not err in awarding such fees.” It contends that
    it “produced sufficient testimony and documentation” on which the circuit court “could rely
    to evaluate the reasonableness of the Hancock fees.”
    7
    As indicated, the case settled and Patient First denied all allegations of negligence.
    -20-
    A.
    Proceedings Below
    During Mr. McCoy’s direct examination regarding the bill Patient First paid to the
    Hancock firm, counsel for Patient First asked him whether “a total invoice of $77,000 [was]
    reasonable” in his “opinion as general counsel of Patient First.” Counsel for CCBC objected
    on the following grounds: (1) “Mr. McCoy was never identified as an expert witness
    previously”; and (2) Mr. McCoy could not testify that the fee he paid in litigation in which
    he was a plaintiff was reasonable. With respect to the second ground, the court stated that
    there was “nothing about the fact that he’s a plaintiff that . . . precludes him from testifying
    to the fairness and reasonableness of the bill.”
    Counsel for Patient First argued that it did not need to admit Mr. McCoy as an expert,
    asserting that, in order to prove damages, it only needed to “establish that the amounts were
    invoiced and . . . paid,” and it was in the court’s discretion to determine whether those
    amounts were reasonable. The court noted that it could not make such a determination
    absent testimony, but that, “as the general counsel, [Mr. McCoy] can express an opinion as
    to whether the bill was reasonable.” The court overruled CCBC’s objection.
    Mr. McCoy then testified that, in his experience with Patient First, the bill represented
    “a reasonable and customary amount for a lawsuit that proceeds through depositions, a
    mediation and to a settlement.” An itemized list of the Hancock firm’s fees was admitted as
    an exhibit during trial.
    -21-
    At the conclusion of trial, both parties presented arguments regarding the damage
    award. The court noted that Patient First’s burden was to prove “not just that a fee was
    incurred but the fairness and reasonableness.”
    B.
    Attorneys’ Fee Portion of Damage Award
    The indemnification language contained in Paragraph 7.1 of the Agreement expressly
    provided that CCBC “will defend, indemnify, and hold [Patient First] harmless from any and
    all losses, claims, liabilities, damages, costs and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’
    fees)” for claims that arise out of the negligence of a CCBC student. Accordingly, the plain
    language of the Agreement provided that Patient First was entitled to indemnification for its
    attorneys’ fees.
    “When an award of attorneys’ fees is ‘based on a contractual right, the losing party
    is “entitled to have the amount of fees and expenses proven with the certainty and under the
    standards ordinarily applicable for proof of contractual damages.”’” B & P Enterprises, 
    133 Md. App. 583
    , 624 (1999) (citations omitted). The party seeking fees “bears the burden ‘to
    provide the evidence necessary for the fact finder to evaluate the reasonableness of the
    fees.’” 
    Id. (quoting Maxima
    Corp. v. 6933 Arlington Dev. Ltd. P’ship, 
    100 Md. App. 441
    ,
    454 (1994)). A circuit court’s determination regarding the reasonableness of attorneys’ fees
    “‘is a factual determination within the sound discretion of the court, and will not be
    overturned unless clearly erroneous.’” Carroll Indep. Fuel Co. v. Washington Real Estate
    -22-
    Inv. Trust, 
    202 Md. App. 206
    , 239 (2011) (quoting Royal Investment Group, LLC v. Wang,
    
    183 Md. App. 406
    , 457 (2008)).
    As indicated, detailed billing statements from the Hancock firm were admitted into
    evidence, providing a breakdown of the charges incurred in responding to the Politis lawsuit.
    The itemization included the date, the amount of time, the attorney, the attorney’s rate, and
    description of the task for each task completed in connection with the Politis Lawsuit.
    Mr. McCoy testified that, in his experience as General Counsel for Patient First, the fees
    charged were reasonable. This evidence was sufficient to establish the reasonableness of the
    fees. See Zachair Ltd. v. Driggs, 
    135 Md. App. 403
    , 438-39 (2000) (attorney may offer lay
    opinion on the reasonableness of fees), cert. denied, 
    363 Md. 206
    (2001). Accord Hinkle,
    Cox, Eaton, Coffield & Hensley v. Cadle Co. of Ohio, Inc., 
    848 P.2d 1079
    , 1083-84 (1993)
    (General Counsel qualified to testify with respect to the reasonableness of attorneys’ fees).
    We perceive no abuse of discretion in the circuit court’s finding that Patient First’s
    attorneys’ fees were reasonable. The court did not err in awarding these fees as damages
    against CCBC.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
    COURT FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY
    AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY
    APPELLANT.
    -23-