2 Ton Plumbing, L.L.C. v. Thorgaard ( 2015 )


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  •                  This opinion is subject to revision before
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2015 UT 29
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    2 TON PLUMBING, L.L.C.,
    Appellee/Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    GREGORY THORGAARD; KENDRA THORGAARD;
    WASHINGTON FEDERAL, INC., dba
    WASHINGTON FEDERAL SAVINGS, et al.
    Appellants/Cross-Appellees.
    No. 20120390
    Filed January 30, 2015
    Fourth District, Heber Dep‘t
    The Honorable Derek P. Pullan
    No. 090500368
    Attorneys:
    David R. Nielson, Tracy A. Wilder, Salt Lake City, for appellee
    Ronald G. Russell, Royce B. Covington, Jeffery A. Balls,
    Salt Lake City, for appellants
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING authored the opinion of the
    Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE PARRISH,
    JUSTICE LEE, and JUDGE KELLY joined.
    Having recused herself, JUSTICE DURHAM does not
    participate herein. DISTRICT JUDGE KEITH A. KELLY sat
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, opinion of the Court:
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶ 1 This case involves interpretation of various provisions of
    the 2009 Mechanics‘ Liens statute. Specifically, we are asked to
    consider (1) whether attorney fees and other costs may be
    included in the value of a mechanics‘ lien, (2) when a notice of
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    release of lien and substitution of alternate security is timely filed,
    and (3) whether the attorney fees award was reasonable.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶ 2 Appellee/cross-appellant, 2 Ton Plumbing, L.L.C.
    (2 Ton), contracted with BNB Development LLC, Performance
    Construction, Inc., and Performance Construction of Utah, LLC
    (collectively, Developers) to provide plumbing-related materials
    and labor to fourteen properties in the Hailstone at Stillwater
    development in Heber City, Utah. From June through September
    2008, 2 Ton furnished improvements to Lot 30, one of the
    Hailstone properties, but was not paid for its work.
    ¶ 3 On January 30, 2009, 2 Ton recorded a notice of
    mechanics‘ lien (original notice of lien) against Lot 30 and eight
    other lots in the development. The notice stated that it secured
    $7,470.72 for ―furnishing plumbing, materials and installation,‖
    ―plus interest, costs and attorney fees.‖ Subsequently, BNB
    Development (BNB), the owner of Lot 30 at the time the lien was
    recorded, conveyed the property to BBRP, LLC. BBRP in turn
    executed a trust deed for Lot 30 in favor of Zions Bancorporation
    (Zions).
    ¶ 4 On July 27, 2009, after filing its original notice of lien,
    2 Ton filed a complaint seeking to enforce its mechanics‘ liens
    against Lot 30 and the other eight properties. The complaint
    named BBRP and Zions as defendants in the lien foreclosure
    action against Lot 30 and also included various other claims
    against the Developers, including breach of contract and joint
    venture liability. The following day, 2 Ton recorded a lis pendens,
    providing notice of the lien foreclosure action against the nine
    properties. BNB and Zions were served with a summons and
    complaint on August 3, 2009, and August 17, 2009, respectively.
    ¶ 5 The Developers timely filed a joint answer to the
    complaint, which BBRP joined. In the joint answer, BNB asserted
    a counterclaim against 2 Ton alleging that 2 Ton had been
    overpaid for its work in the Hailstone development. BBRP also
    independently asserted 2 Ton‘s overpayment as a defense to the
    lien foreclosure claim against Lot 30.
    ¶ 6 On October 14, 2009, Appellants Gregory and Kendra
    Thorgaard purchased Lot 30 from BBRP. To secure their purchase
    loan, the Thorgaards executed a trust deed in favor of Appellant
    2
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                           Opinion of the Court
    Washington Federal (Appellants, the Thorgaards and their lender
    Washington Federal, will be collectively referred to as ―the
    Thorgaards‖).
    ¶ 7 2 Ton filed an amended complaint on November 20, 2009,
    which did not name the Thorgaards as defendants. The same day,
    2 Ton‘s counsel wrote to the Thorgaards advising them of the lien
    and warning them that there would be greater legal expense if
    further action was necessary. The letter invited the Thorgaards to
    voluntarily satisfy the lien and indicated the amount owed. The
    Thorgaards declined the invitation.
    ¶ 8 On April 30, 2010, 2 Ton filed a second amended
    complaint, for the first time naming the Thorgaards and
    Washington Federal as defendants in the lien foreclosure action.
    2 Ton served the Thorgaards with the complaint on May 10, 2010
    and Washington Federal on June 18, 2010. Like their predecessor
    in interest, BBRP, the Thorgaards also contested the validity of the
    lien on the basis that 2 Ton had been overpaid for its work.
    ¶ 9 That summer, on August 5, 2010, 2 Ton recorded an
    amended notice of mechanics‘ lien against Lot 30 in the amount of
    $20,983.42. The amended notice provided that ―there is currently
    believed to be owed a total of $20,983.42 consisting of principal of
    $7,147.41, plus lien fees of $110, plus interest and late fees of
    $2,480.30, plus pro rata costs of $942.44, plus pro rata attorney fees
    of $10,323.27, which amount could change, should additional
    credits, charges, interest, costs and attorney fees be incurred.‖
    ¶ 10 On September 16, 2010, Washington Federal recorded its
    notice of release of lien and substitution of alternate security and
    made a cash deposit of $14,942.00. This document purported to
    release 2 Ton‘s original January 30, 2009 notice of lien with its
    claim of $7,147.41. Washington Federal did not address the
    amended notice of lien that 2 Ton had recorded the month before
    in the amount of $20,983.42.
    ¶ 11 On January 12, 2011, 2 Ton filed a third amended
    complaint which, among other things, sought to invalidate
    Washington Federal‘s lien release on the grounds that it attached
    insufficient alternate security. 2 Ton argued that the alternate
    security should have been 175 percent of the amount claimed in
    its amended notice of lien—$20,983.42. 2 Ton also asserted a
    3
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    claim against the alternate security, as required by Utah Code
    section 38-1-28(4)(b) (2009).1
    ¶ 12 On January 28, 2011, the Thorgaards moved to dismiss
    two counts of 2 Ton‘s third amended complaint—the lien
    foreclosure claim, and the claim that the lien release and
    substitution of alternate security was invalid. The Thorgaards
    contended that their lien release was valid because they properly
    submitted a cash deposit in the amount of 200 percent of 2 Ton‘s
    original lien claim and thus fully complied with the pertinent
    section of the Mechanics‘ Liens statute, Utah Code section 38-1-28.
    They argued that a mechanics‘ lien claim is limited to the ―value
    of the services rendered, labor performed, or materials or
    equipment furnished or rented‖ and attorney fees and costs are
    not included in this amount. The Thorgaards also argued that the
    amended notice of lien was invalid and ―unenforceable‖ because
    it was untimely filed and ―moreover . . . [could] not be used to
    trigger a requirement for more security than what is required
    under section 38-1-28.‖ After briefing and oral argument on the
    matter, the district court denied the Thorgaards‘ motion to
    dismiss. The Thorgaards appeal in part from that denial.
    ¶ 13 Ten days after the hearing on the motion to dismiss, on
    June 13, 2011, 2 Ton recorded a second amended notice of
    mechanics‘ lien against Lot 30 in the amount of $38,714.98. The
    second amended notice of lien alleged, again, that $7,147.41 of this
    amount was for improvements to the property while the
    remaining sum consisted of lien fees, interest, late fees, costs, and
    attorney fees.
    ¶ 14 As the litigation continued, the Thorgaards and
    Developers continued to dispute the validity of the lien on the
    basis that 2 Ton had been overpaid for its work. Ultimately, on
    December 5, 2011, the Thorgaards stipulated to a finding of fact
    1 In 2012, the ―Mechanics‘ Liens‖ section of the Utah Code was
    renumbered, amended, and partially repealed. The amended
    statutory scheme can now be found at Utah Code sections 38-1a-
    101 to -804 (2014). Because the 2009 version of the code was in
    effect ―at the time of the event regulated by the law in question,‖
    we cite to that version throughout. State v. Folsom, 
    2015 UT 14
    ,
    ¶ 10, __P.3d__.
    4
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                            Opinion of the Court
    that the value of the services rendered, labor performed, or
    materials or equipment furnished or rented by 2 Ton that had not
    been paid on Lot 30 was $7,147.41.
    ¶ 15 Following the Thorgaards‘ stipulation, 2 Ton submitted
    affidavit testimony and exhibits to support its claim for attorney
    fees. 2 Ton alleged that it had incurred $37,019.53 in attorney fees
    and $1,543.56 in costs prosecuting its lien against Lot 30. The
    Thorgaards contested 2 Ton‘s claim for attorney fees on the basis
    that the amount was unreasonable, that attorney fees should be
    allocated to those defendants who caused 2 Ton to incur the
    majority of those fees, and that attorney fees should be awarded
    on a per capita basis against all fourteen lots in the development.
    ¶ 16 On March 19, 2012, the district court entered a ruling
    and order on the award of attorney fees, and on April 16, 2012, it
    entered a judgment against Lot 30 in the amount of $57,972.42.
    The judgment included $7,147.41 in principal, $1,287.50 in costs,
    $110 for a lien filing fee, $4,569.81 in interest, and $44,857.70 in
    attorney fees. The Thorgaards also appeal from this judgment.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶ 17 The Thorgaards and Washington Federal raise three
    issues on appeal. First, they contend that the district court erred
    by ruling that attorney fees and costs are properly included in a
    mechanics‘ lien and therefore erroneously found their notice of
    release of lien and substitution of alternate security was invalid.
    A district court‘s interpretation of relevant statutory provisions is
    reviewed for correctness, giving ―no deference to the district
    court‘s decision.‖2
    ¶ 18 Second, the Thorgaards argue that the district court
    erroneously held that 2 Ton‘s amended notices of lien were timely
    filed. Because we hold that the amended notices of lien were
    invalid, we do not address this issue.
    ¶ 19 Finally, the Thorgaards challenge the district court‘s
    award of $44,957.70 in attorney fees. A district court‘s calculation
    2  Carter v. Univ. of Utah Med. Ctr., 
    2006 UT 78
    , ¶ 8, 
    150 P.3d 467
    ;
    see also Hutter v. Dig-It, Inc., 
    2009 UT 69
    , ¶ 8, 
    219 P.3d 918
    .
    5
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    of attorney fees will not be overturned absent a showing that the
    district court abused its discretion.3
    ¶ 20 2 Ton raises one issue on cross-appeal. It argues that the
    district court erred by allowing Washington Federal to record its
    notice of release of lien and substitution of alternate security more
    than ninety days after the original owner of Lot 30 was served
    with a summons and complaint in the lien foreclosure action. We
    review questions of statutory interpretation for correctness,
    granting no deference to the district court‘s decision.4
    ANALYSIS
    ¶ 21 ―Mechanics‘ liens are statutory creatures unknown to the
    common law.‖5 The Utah Mechanics‘ Liens statute is to be
    ―liberally construed‖ to effect its purpose, which is ―to provide
    protection to those who enhance the value of a property by
    supplying labor or materials.‖6 Of course, ―[w]hile it is true that
    our statutes are to be liberally construed to give effect to their
    purpose and to promote justice,‖ we note that ―it is equally true
    that they should not be distorted beyond the intent of the
    legislature.‖7 Most statutes, including this one, are the result of a
    legislative balancing of ―competing policy considerations.‖8
    Accordingly, we begin our analysis with the plain language of the
    statute. In so doing, we read the plain language of the Mechanics‘
    Lien Act ―as a whole and interpret its provisions in harmony with
    3Bakowski v. Mountain States Steel, Inc., 
    2002 UT 62
    ¶ 33, 
    52 P.3d 1179
    ; Dixie State Bank v. Bracken, 
    764 P.2d 985
    , 988 (Utah 1988).
    4   Carter, 
    2006 UT 78
    , ¶ 8.
    5 AAA Fencing Co. v. Raintree Dev. & Energy Co., 
    714 P.2d 289
    ,
    291 (Utah 1986).
    6   
    Id. 7Graco Fishing
    & Rental Tools, Inc. v. Ironwood Exploration, Inc.,
    
    766 P.2d 1074
    , 1079 (Utah 1988) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    8 McArthur v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    2012 UT 22
    , ¶ 14,
    
    274 P.3d 981
    .
    6
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                              Opinion of the Court
    other provisions in the same statute.‖9 This is because a statute
    ―is passed as a whole‖ and ―[c]onsequently, each part or section
    should be construed in connection with every other part or section
    so as to produce a harmonious whole.‖10 However, ―where the
    statute fails, courts cannot create rights, and should not do so by
    unnatural and forced construction.‖11 ―[A] lien created solely by
    statute depends on the terms of the statute . . . .‖12 Because a
    mechanics‘ lien is a ―statutory creature,‖ we begin with a review
    of the relevant statutory provisions of the Mechanics‘ Liens
    statute.
    ¶ 22 In 2012, the ―Mechanics‘ Liens‖ section of the Utah Code
    was renumbered, amended, and partially repealed. The current
    statutory provisions now appear under the chapter name
    ―Preconstruction and Construction liens,‖ and can be found in the
    Utah Code at section 38-1a-101 through section 38-1a-804. Of
    particular note, two sections central to this case, Utah Code
    sections 38-1-16 and 38-1-17 (2009), were repealed by the Utah
    Legislature in 2012. This case involves the 2009 version of the
    Utah Code. Because ―we apply the law as it exists at the time of
    the event regulated by the law in question,‖13 we will refer to the
    2009 version of the Mechanics‘ Liens statutes throughout.
    ¶ 23 Under section 38-1-3 of the Utah Code, a subcontractor
    ―shall have a lien upon the property upon or concerning which
    they have rendered service, performed labor, or furnished or
    rented materials or equipment for the value of the service
    rendered, labor performed, or materials or equipment furnished
    9  Sill v. Hart, 
    2007 UT 45
    , ¶¶ 7, 13, 
    162 P.3d 1099
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (interpreting the plain language of the
    Mechanics‘ Lien Act and holding that a possible interpretation
    failed in part because it was ―counter to the purpose and context‖
    of the Act).
    10   
    Id. ¶ 7
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    11   Eccles Lumber Co. v. Martin, 
    87 P. 713
    , 716 (Utah 1906).
    12   AAA Fencing 
    Co., 714 P.2d at 292
    .
    13 State v. Folsom, 
    2015 UT 14
    , ¶ 10, __ P.3d__ (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    7
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    or rented.‖14    A lien ―attach[es] as of the date of the
    commencement of the first work on the improvement or structure
    involved,‖15 but in order to perfect the lien, a lien claimant must
    follow the procedures dictated by the statute.16
    ¶ 24 Section 38-1-7 of the Utah Code provides that a lien
    claimant ―shall file‖ a ―written notice to hold and claim a lien.‖17
    Subsection 38-1-7(2)(a) specifies further that a lien claimant‘s
    notice of lien ―shall‖ set forth, among other things, the ―amount of
    the lien claim.‖18 The lien claimant must file the completed notice
    of lien with the county recorder no later than ―180 days after the
    day on which occurs final completion of the original contract.‖19
    And, ―[w]ithin 30 days after filing the notice of lien, the lien
    claimant shall deliver or mail . . . a copy of the notice of lien to
    (i) the reputed owner of the real property; or (ii) the record owner
    of the real property.‖20
    ¶ 25 After filing the notice of lien, section 38-1-11 requires
    that the lien claimant record a lis pendens with the county
    recorder and ―file an action to enforce the lien,‖ both within 180
    days from the day on which the lien notice was filed.21 If that
    action is successful, ―[t]he court shall cause the property to be sold
    in satisfaction of the liens and costs.‖22 ―Costs‖ include ―the costs
    14   UTAH CODE § 38-1-3.
    See Calder Bros. Co. v. Anderson, 
    652 P.2d 922
    , 924 (Utah 1982);
    15
    UTAH CODE § 38-1-5.
    16 AAA Fencing 
    Co., 714 P.2d at 291
    (―[C]ompliance with the
    statute is required before a party is entitled to the benefits created
    by the statute.‖).
    17   UTAH CODE § 38-1-7(1)(a)(i).
    18   
    Id. § 38-1-7(2)(a).
       19   
    Id. § 38-1-7(1)(a)(i)(A).
       20   
    Id. § 38-1-7(3)(a).
       21   
    Id. § 38-1-11(2),
    (3).
    22 
    Id. § 38-1-15
    (The sale shall be conducted ―as in the case of
    foreclosure of mortgages, subject to the same right of
    redemption.‖).
    8
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                                Opinion of the Court
    of preparing and recording the notice of claim of lien and such
    reasonable attorneys‘ fee as may be incurred in preparing and
    recording said notice of claim of lien.‖23 In terms of attorney fees,
    the statute specifically provides that the ―successful party‖ in an
    action to enforce a mechanics‘ lien ―shall be entitled to recover a
    reasonable attorneys‘ fee, to be fixed by the court, which shall be
    taxed as costs in the action.‖24 The Act further provides that the
    court has the power to apportion costs between a contractor and
    an owner, ―but in all cases each subcontractor exhibiting a lien
    shall have his costs awarded to him,‖ including reasonable
    attorneys‘ fees.25
    ¶ 26 Utah Code section 38-1-28 sets forth procedures by
    which a party disputing a lien‘s validity may release the lien and
    clear the subject property‘s title. The statute provides that ―[t]he
    owner of any interest in real property that is subject to a
    mechanics‘ lien recorded under this chapter, . . . who disputes the
    correctness or validity of the lien may record a notice of release of
    lien and substitution of alternate security.‖26
    ¶ 27 The statute requires that the notice of release of lien be
    filed within ―90 days after the day on which the person filing a
    notice of release of lien and substitution of alternate security is
    served with a summons and lien foreclosure complaint.‖27
    Among other things, the notice must include ―as an attachment a
    surety bond or evidence of a cash deposit‖ in an amount equal to
    23   
    Id. 38-1-17. 24
    Id. 38-1-18(1). Additionally, 
    under section 38-1-16, ―[e]very
    person whose claim is not satisfied . . . may have judgment
    docketed for the balance unpaid, and execution therefor against
    the party personally liable.‖ 
    Id. § 38-1-16
    (2009).
    25 
    Id. § 38-1-17;
    see also Shupe v. Menlove, 
    417 P.2d 246
    , 249 (Utah
    1966) (―It is plain that [sections 38-1-17 and 38-1-18] should be
    construed together and that when attorney fees are awardable
    thereunder they are to be treated as costs which, as expressed in
    38-1-17 the court ‗shall apportion the costs according to the right of
    the case.‘‖).
    26   
    Id. § 38-1-28(1).
       27   
    Id. § 38-1-28(1)(c).
    9
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    either 150 percent, 175 percent, or 200 percent of the amount
    claimed by the lien claimant on his or her notice of lien.28 The
    surety bond or evidence of a cash deposit must be ―made payable
    to the lien claimant‖ and ―conditioned for the payment of . . . the
    judgment that would have been rendered, or has been rendered
    against the property in the action to enforce the lien; and . . . any
    costs and attorneys‘ fees awarded by the court.‖29 If the property
    owner disputes the amount claimed in the notice of lien, he may
    petition the court to hold a hearing to determine the correct
    amount of the lien claim ―for the sole purpose of providing
    alternate security.‖30
    ¶ 28 Within thirty days of recording the notice of release of
    lien, the property owner must serve the lien claimant with a
    copy.31 And within ninety days of receipt of the notice, the lien
    claimant must add the alternate security as a party to the lien
    foreclosure action if a suit is pending.32 After meeting the
    statutory requirements set forth in subsections 38-1-28(1) and (2),
    ―the real property described in the notice shall be released from
    the mechanics‘ lien to which the notice applies.‖33
    ¶ 29 In short, posting the alternate security causes the lien to
    no longer be secured by the original real estate, and instead the
    lien becomes secured by the bond or cash equivalent posted. The
    posting of alternate security does not eliminate the lien or alter the
    rights and obligations of the parties. Instead, the alternate
    security serves as substitute security for the lien and judgment on
    the action to enforce the lien.34 After alternate security is
    28Id. § 38-1-28(2)(c) (explaining that the percentage required to
    be posted depends on the amount of the lien claimed).
    29   
    Id. § 38-1-28(2)(c)(iii)–(iv).
       30   
    Id. § 38-1-28(7)(a).
       31   
    Id. § 38-1-28(4)(a).
       32   
    Id. § 38-1-28(4)(b).
       33   
    Id. § 38-1-28(1),
    (3)(a).
    34 See Royster Constr. Co. v. Urban West Cmtys., 
    47 Cal. Rptr. 2d 684
    , 688 (Ct. App. 1995) (―The recording of the release bond does
    not extinguish the lien; rather, the bond is substituted for the land
    (con‘t.)
    10
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                             Opinion of the Court
    substituted for the property, the lien foreclosure action proceeds
    against the alternate security and the party ―disput[ing] the
    correctness or validity of the lien,‖ but not the subject property.35
    Section 38-1-28 ―does not otherwise affect the rights of interested
    parties‖ in the underlying action to enforce the lien.36
    ¶ 30 The procedures under Utah Code section 38-1-28 balance
    the rights of land owners with the rights of lien claimants. 37 The
    statute provides lien claimants with a substitute source of security
    from which the claimant may ultimately recover. At the same
    time, it furthers the public policy in favor of alienability of
    as the object to which the lien attaches, with the lien transferred
    from the land to the bond.‖); Am. Bank v. Wadsworth Golf Constr.
    Co. of the Sw., 
    307 P.3d 1212
    , 1218 (Idaho 2013) (―[T]he lien release
    bond is merely meant to act as substitute security for the real
    property and does not otherwise affect the rights of interested
    parties.‖); Gil Ruehl Mech., Inc. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 
    164 S.W.3d 512
    , 513–14 (Ky. Ct. App. 2004) (interpreting Kentucky‘s
    mechanics‘ lien release bond statute ―as creating a bond that is a
    ‗mere substitute for the lien property‘‖(citation omitted)).
    35   UTAH CODE § 38-1-28(1).
    36   Am. 
    Bank, 307 P.3d at 1218
    .
    37  Projects Unlimited, Inc. v. Copper State Thrift & Loan Co., 
    798 P.2d 738
    , 743 (Utah 1990) (―[W]e recognize that liens create an
    encumbrance on property that deprives the owner of his ability to
    convey clear title and impairs his credit . . . . State legislatures and
    courts attempt to balance these competing interests through their
    mechanic‘s lien statutes and judicial interpretations thereof.‖
    (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted)); accord
    Hunzinger Constr. Co. v. SCS of Wis., Inc., 
    694 N.W.2d 487
    , 491 (Wis.
    Ct. App 2005) (―[T]he release bond procedure . . . provides a
    means by which, before a final determination of the lien claimant‘s
    rights and without prejudice to those rights, the property may be
    freed of the lien, so that it may be sold, developed or used as
    security for a loan. The procedure thus protects both the property
    owner by allowing the bond to substitute for the land as the object
    to which the lien attaches and the claimant by providing an
    alternate source of recovery on the claim of lien.‖).
    11
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    property38 by allowing land owners to sell (or refinance) their
    property while a lien foreclosure action is ongoing. But a release
    of lien and substitution of alternate security under section 38-1-28
    ―does not otherwise affect the rights of interested parties‖ in the
    underlying action to enforce the lien.39
    I. THE VALIDITY OF 2 TON‘S NOTICES
    OF MECHANICS‘ LIEN
    ¶ 31 Resolution of the claims before us requires interpretation
    of Utah‘s Mechanics‘ Liens statute. ―It is well settled that when
    faced with a question of statutory interpretation, our primary goal
    is to evince the true intent and purpose of the Legislature.‖40 ―The
    best evidence of the legislature‘s intent is the plain language of the
    statute itself.‖41 ―[W]e presume that the legislature was deliberate
    in its choice of words and used each term advisedly and in
    accordance with its ordinary meaning.             Where a statute‘s
    language is unambiguous and provides a workable result, we
    need not resort to other interpretive tools, and our analysis
    ends.‖42
    ¶ 32 However, ―our plain language analysis is not so limited
    that we only inquire into individual words and subsections in
    isolation; our interpretation of a statute requires that each part or
    section be construed in connection with every other part or
    section so as to produce a harmonious whole.‖43 When interpreting
    statutory text, we presume ―that the expression of one [term]
    38   Boyle v. Baggs, 
    350 P.2d 622
    , 624-25 (Utah 1960).
    39   Am. 
    Bank, 307 P.3d at 1218
    .
    40 Marion Energy, Inc. v. KFJ Ranch P’ship, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 14, 
    267 P.3d 863
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    41 State v. Miller, 
    2008 UT 61
    , ¶ 18, 
    193 P.3d 92
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    42  Torrie v. Weber Cnty., 
    2013 UT 48
    , ¶ 11, 
    309 P.3d 216
    (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    43Anderson v. Bell, 
    2010 UT 47
    , ¶ 9, 
    234 P.3d 1147
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
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                               Opinion of the Court
    should be interpreted as the exclusion of another,‖44 and will not
    ―infer substantive terms into the text that are not already there.‖45
    ―[W]e assume, absent a contrary indication, that the legislature
    used each term advisedly . . . [and] seek to give effect to omissions
    in statutory language by presuming all omissions to be
    purposeful.‖46
    A. 2 Ton’s Amended Notices of Lien Are Invalid Because
    Attorney Fees and Costs Should not Be Included
    in the Value of a Mechanics’ Lien
    ¶ 33 2 Ton recorded three notices of lien, each for the same
    underlying claim, but the latter two amended the amount of
    2 Ton‘s mechanics‘ lien claim to include attorney fees and costs up
    to the date of the amended notices. The Thorgaards argue that the
    Mechanics‘ Liens statute limits a mechanics‘ lien to the ―value of
    the service rendered, labor performed, or materials or equipment
    furnished or rented.‖47 They maintain the Utah Code does not
    allow a lien claimant to include attorney fees or costs incurred in
    prosecuting the lien claim in the ―amount of the lien claim‖ set
    forth in the notice of lien.48 We agree.
    ¶ 34 Any reference to ―attorney fees‖ is notably absent from
    section 38-1-3‘s statutory language, which sets forth ―what may be
    attached‖ in a lien claim, as well as from section 38-1-7, which
    states the information that ―shall‖ be contained in the notice of
    lien. The legislature omitted attorney fees and costs from the
    value of a lien, and we presume this choice was purposeful.49
    Moreover, to stretch the language describing the value of a
    mechanics‘ lien in a way that includes attorney fees is inconsistent
    with our general rule that ―[a]ttorney fees are awarded only when
    44  Marion Energy, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 14 (alteration in original)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    45   Berrett v. Purser & Edwards, 
    876 P.2d 367
    , 370 (Utah 1994).
    46Marion Energy, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 14 (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    47   UTAH CODE § 38-1-3 (2009).
    48   
    Id. § 38-1-7(2)(a)(vi).
       49   See Marion Energy, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 14.
    13
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    authorized by statute or by contract.‖50 Had the legislature
    intended for attorney fees and costs to be included in the value of
    a mechanics‘ lien, it could have said so, particularly in light of
    ―the Legislature‘s ability and willingness to single out attorney
    fees‖51 elsewhere in the Utah Code.
    ¶ 35 Viewed as a whole, the Mechanics‘ Liens statute shows
    that our legislature created a careful plan for awarding a lien
    claimant attorney fees. Allowing attorney fees and other costs to
    be included in the original amount of a mechanics‘ lien would
    frustrate this plan. Section 38-1-18 provides that if a lien claimant
    elects to enforce the mechanics‘ lien, ―the successful party shall be
    entitled to recover a reasonable attorneys‘ fee, to be fixed by the
    court, which shall be taxed as costs in the action.‖52 This
    provision clarifies that an award of attorney fees is a conditional
    award that depends upon the outcome of the action to enforce the
    lien. Pursuant to section 38-1-18, a ―successful party‖ must be
    ascertained before a lien claimant is entitled to claim attorney fees.
    ¶ 36 Furthermore, to allow a lien claimant to include attorney
    fees and costs in the lien claim would distort the provisions for the
    posting of alternate security.53 Section 38-1-18(1) makes clear that
    an award of attorney fees is conditioned on the successful
    prosecution of a lien enforcement action. If attorney fees were
    included in the amount of the lien claim, then as litigation
    proceeded in the action to enforce the lien and more attorney fees
    were incurred, the amount of the lien would increase. A party
    seeking to post alternate security would be chasing a moving
    target, because as the lien amount increased, the amount required
    for alternate security would correspondingly increase.
    50   Jensen v. Sawyers, 
    2005 UT 81
    , ¶ 127, 
    130 P.3d 325
    .
    51   Tholen v. Sandy City, 
    849 P.2d 592
    , 596 (Utah Ct. App. 1993).
    52  UTAH CODE § 38-1-18(1); see also 
    id. § 38-1-17
    (―[B]ut in all
    cases each subcontractor exhibiting a lien shall have his costs
    awarded to him, including the costs of preparing and recording
    the notice of claim of lien and such reasonable attorneys‘ fee as
    may be incurred in preparing and recording said notice of claim of
    lien.‖).
    53   
    Id. § 38-1-28.
    14
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                             Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 37 2 Ton argues that attorney fees are part of a mechanics‘
    lien against the property because attorney fees are costs, and
    costs—in addition to the amounts owed on the lien—are paid
    from the property sale proceeds. In essence, they contend that
    because the property secures both the lien and costs, attorney fees
    that accrue may be added to the lien against the property even
    before the lien foreclosure action has been resolved.54
    ¶ 38 2 Ton‘s position not only conflicts with the plain
    language of the statutory scheme, but it is inconsistent with the
    very nature of a lien. ―In its broadest sense and common
    acceptation, the word ‗lien‘ is understood and used to denote a
    legal claim or charge collectible out of property either real or
    personal, as security, for the payment of some debt or
    obligation.‖55 Since a party has no obligation to pay attorney fees
    in a lien foreclosure action unless the action has concluded and
    that party has lost, such attorney fees cannot properly be included
    in the mechanics‘ lien claim amount. In Park v. Jameson, we held
    that attorney fees could constitute a lien on the property, but this
    was only after judgment on the action to enforce the lien had been
    awarded by the court in favor of the lien claimant.56 It would not
    make sense to include attorney fees in the amount of the lien
    54 Utah Code section 38-1-16 reads, ―Every person whose claim
    is not satisfied as herein provided may have judgment docketed
    for the balance unpaid, and execution therefor against the party
    personally liable.‖ (emphasis added). Given the specificity with
    which the legislature describes how attorney fees are to be
    awarded in section 38-1-18, we do not read the legislature‘s
    passing reference to ―claim‖ as permitting a lien claimant to
    include attorney fees and costs in his notice of lien. See Madsen v.
    Brown, 
    701 P.2d 1086
    , 1090 (Utah 1985) (―It is a long-standing rule
    of statutory construction that a provision treating a matter
    specifically prevails over an incidental reference made thereto in a
    provision treating another issue, not because one provision has
    more force than another, but because the legislative mind is
    presumed to have stated its intent when it focused on that
    particular issue.‖).
    55   Olsen v. Kidman, 
    235 P.2d 510
    , 511 (Utah 1951).
    56   
    364 P.2d 1
    , 4 (Utah 1961); see also UTAH CODE § 38-1-18.
    15
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    claim when those attorney fees can neither be ascertained nor
    awarded to the lien claimant until the conclusion of the lien
    enforcement action (and only if the lien claimant has prevailed).
    ¶ 39 Our conclusion that a mechanics‘ lien is limited to ―the
    value of the service rendered, labor performed, or materials or
    equipment furnished or rented‖57 is supported both by a common
    understanding of the word ―lien‖58 as well as language
    throughout the statute that indicates that the terms ―lien‖ and
    ―costs and attorney fees‖ are separate and distinct.59 For example,
    section 38-1-28(2)(c)(iv) provides that
    (2) A notice of release of lien and substitution of
    alternate security . . . shall . . . have as an
    attachment a surety bond or evidence of a cash
    deposit that . . . is conditioned for the payment of:
    (A) the judgment that would have been rendered,
    or has been rendered against the property in the
    action to enforce the lien; and
    (B) any costs and attorneys’ fees awarded by the
    court . . . .60
    57   UTAH CODE § 38-1-3.
    58 See, e.g., 
    Olsen, 235 P.2d at 511
    ; BLACK‘S LAW DICTIONARY 1006
    (9th ed. 2009).
    59 See UTAH CODE § 38-1-7(3)(c) (―Failure to deliver or mail the
    notice of lien to the reputed owner or record owner precludes the
    lien claimant from an award of costs and attorneys’ fees . . . .‖
    (emphases added)); 
    id. § 38-1-17
    (―[I]n all cases each subcontractor
    exhibiting a lien shall have his costs awarded to him, including the
    costs of preparing and recording the notice of claim of lien and
    such reasonable attorneys’ fee as may be incurred in preparing and
    recording said notice of claim of lien.‖ (emphases added)); 
    id. § 38-1-18(1)
    (―[I]n any action brought to enforce any lien under this
    chapter the successful party shall be entitled to recover a reasonable
    attorneys’ fee, to be fixed by the court, which shall be taxed as costs
    in the action.‖ (emphasis added)); 
    id. § 38-1-28(2)(c)(iv).
       60   
    Id. § 38-1-28(2)(c)(iv)
    (emphases added).
    16
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                              Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 40 In view of the legislature‘s separation of subsection (A)
    and (B) by the conjunctive ―and,‖ it follows that the terms ―lien‖
    and ―costs and attorneys‘ fees‖ represent separate and distinct
    concepts. If a mechanics‘ lien could be amended to include costs
    and attorney fees, subsection (B) would be rendered
    superfluous.61 Moreover, our own court of appeals has noted that
    ―attorney fees should not be confused with the more generic term
    ‗costs‘ because without specific statutory language, costs do not
    include attorney fees.‖62
    ¶ 41 Section 38-1-28 reinforces the tie between the lien
    enforcement action, the alternate security amount used to obtain
    the lien release, and attorney fees. When the owner of any interest
    in real property is subject to a mechanics‘ lien in an amount of less
    than $15,000 she must attach either a surety bond or evidence of a
    cash deposit that is 200 percent of the amount claimed by the lien
    claimant.63 If the lien claimant prevails, the amount of security in
    excess of the lien claim may be used towards attorney fees.
    However, attorney fees will only be awarded to the lien claimant
    if the lien claimant (1) timely files an action to enforce the lien
    under section 38-1-11 and (2) prevails. A lien claimant cannot
    ―put the cart before the horse‖ by amending his lien notice to
    increase the lien claim amount with attorney fees that have not yet
    been awarded.64
    ¶ 42 Finally, our conclusion that a mechanics‘ lien does not
    secure attorney fees and costs is supported by existing case law in
    61 See State v. Jeffries, 
    2009 UT 57
    , ¶ 9, 
    217 P.3d 265
    (explaining
    that statutes ―should be construed . . . so that no part [or
    provision] will be inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant,
    and so that one section will not destroy another‖ (alterations in
    original) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    62   
    Tholen, 849 P.2d at 596
    .
    63 UTAH    CODE § 38-1-28(2)(c)(ii)(C).
    64 This is especially so given that the statute requires that the
    alternate security contain a 50 to 100 percent buffer on top of the
    lien amount, presumably to cover some if not all of the costs and
    attorney fees. 
    Id. § 38-1-28(2)(c)(ii).
    17
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    other jurisdictions.65 Appellants‘ contend that the value of a
    mechanics‘ lien is limited to ―the value of the service rendered,
    labor performed, or materials or equipment furnished or
    rented.‖66 This is consistent with both the language of the statute
    as well as our decisions recognizing that mechanics‘ liens ―protect
    original contractors, subcontractors, and others who enhance the
    value of real property through improvements.‖67 While ―service
    rendered, labor performed, or materials or equipment furnished
    or rented‖ help improve and enhance the value of real property,
    attorney fees and costs do not.68
    65 See Nat’l Lumber Co. v. United Cas. & Sur. Ins. Co., 
    802 N.E.2d 82
    , 86 (Mass. 2004) (―[O]ur inquiry is limited to whether a
    mechanic‘s lien recorded pursuant to [the mechanics‘ lien statute],
    includes contractual interest and reasonable attorney‘s fees in
    addition to the amount claimed for labor and materials. We
    conclude that it does not.‖); Artsmith Dev. Grp., Inc. v. Updegraff,
    
    868 A.2d 495
    , 496 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2005) (explaining that the
    ―statutory basis for a mechanics‘ lien expressly limits the lien to
    amounts owed for labor and materials only‖ and therefore,
    ―interest [and] attorneys‘ fees . . . were not properly the subject of a
    mechanics‘ lien claim‖).
    66   UTAH CODE § 38-1-3.
    67 Sill v. Hart, 
    2007 UT 45
    , ¶ 12, 
    162 P.3d 1099
    ; see also A.K. & R.
    Whipple Plumbing & Heating v. Guy, 
    2004 UT 47
    , ¶ 24, 
    94 P.3d 270
    (―The purpose of the mechanic‘s lien is to protect those whose
    labor or materials have enhanced the value of property.‖); Projects
    Unlimited, Inc. v. Copper State Thrift & Loan Co., 
    798 P.2d 738
    , 743
    (Utah 1990) (―[T]he purpose of the mechanic‘s lien act is remedial
    in nature and seeks to provide protection to laborers and
    materialmen who have added directly to the value of the property
    of another by their materials or labor.‖ (internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    68 See All Clean, Inc. v. Timberline Props., 
    2011 UT App 370
    , ¶ 19,
    
    264 P.3d 244
    (―Because All Clean‘s flood mitigation work in
    Timberline‘s building was not an improvement of any building or
    structure or an improvement to any premises, so as to fall within
    the scope of the mechanics‘ lien statute, we affirm the trial court‘s
    decision that the statute did not apply here and that All Clean was
    (con‘t.)
    18
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                            Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 43 We conclude that the district court erred when it
    determined that the lien claim amount listed in a mechanics‘ lien
    notice may include attorney fees and costs. Because the amount
    of a mechanics‘ lien claim is limited to the value of the services,
    labor, and material that the lien claimant alleges he is owed, we
    hold that it is improper to add attorney fees and costs to that
    amount.69 Accordingly, we hold that 2 Ton‘s amended notices of
    lien are invalid because they improperly included attorney fees
    and costs in the amount of the lien claim. 2 Ton‘s original notice
    of lien, however, was and is valid.
    ¶ 44 Because we hold that the amended notices of lien are
    invalid, we do not address the Thorgaards‘ alternative argument
    that the notice of lien was not timely amended.
    B. 2 Ton’s Cross-Appeal
    ¶ 45 2 Ton argues that the district court erred by allowing the
    Thorgaards to record their notice of release of lien and
    substitution of alternate security more than ninety days after
    service was accomplished on the property‘s original owner in
    violation of Utah Code section 38-1-28(1)(c). In other words,
    2 Ton asks us to hold that a property owner cannot release a lien
    and post alternate security if he or she is served with the
    summons and complaint midway through a lien foreclosure
    action. Because section 38-1-28(1) unambiguously allows ―[t]he
    owner of any interest in real property that is subject to a
    mechanics‘ lien‖ to file a notice of release of lien within ninety
    days after that person is served, we affirm the district court‘s ruling
    that the notice of release of lien was timely.70
    therefore not entitled to the benefit of the statute‘s attorney fees
    provision.‖ (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted));
    Daniels v. Deseret Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 
    771 P.2d 1100
    , 1103 (Utah
    Ct. App. 1989) (―The profits a person is entitled to as the result of
    an investment do not constitute improvements to the realty nor do
    they fall within the statutory meaning of services or materials as
    contemplated in the mechanic‘s lien law statutes.‖).
    69   See UTAH CODE § 38-1-3.
    70 2 Ton argues that section 38-1-28(1)(c) should be construed to
    require a release to be recorded within ninety days of the date
    service was completed on ―the original owner(s), and not from the
    (con‘t.)
    19
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 46 Utah Code section 38-1-28(1)(c) allows owners of real
    property to release a lien from that property by posting alternate
    security ―before the expiration of 90 days after the day on which
    the person filing a notice of release of lien . . . is served with a
    summons and lien foreclosure complaint.‖71 Under the statute,
    the alternate security that replaces the lien must be 150 percent of
    the amount claimed in notice of lien if the claim is for $25,000 or
    more, 175 percent if the lien claim is between $15,000 and $25,000,
    and 200 percent if the lien is less than $15,000.72 If the lien
    claimant is successful, the 50 to 100 percent surplus in excess of
    the lien claim amount may be used to pay the lien claimant‘s
    attorney fees and costs. On that basis, 2 Ton argues that the intent
    of the ninety day provision ―is to require the lien to be released
    [by the original owner] at the beginning of the lawsuit, before
    significant fees are incurred.‖ 2 Ton contends that a successful
    date of service on any subsequent owner(s).‖ In support of this
    argument, 2 Ton argues that subsequent owners cannot ―acquire[]
    greater rights in the property than their predecessor.‖ This
    interpretation is not supported by the plain language of the statute
    which states simply that an owner of any interest may file a notice
    of release within ninety days after ―the person filing a notice of
    release of lien . . . is served.‖ UTAH CODE § 38-1-28(1)(c) (emphasis
    added). When interpreting a statute, ―we assume that each term
    in the statute was used advisedly; thus the statutory words are
    read literally.‖ Sill, 
    2007 UT 45
    , ¶ 11 (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The plain meaning of ―the person filing‖ indicates that
    the owner who is filing the release has the right to file it within
    ninety days after he or she is served. Because the statute refers
    very generally to ―the person filing‖ we cannot read into this
    language a limitation that ―the person‖ refers only to the original
    owner.
    71  As noted, the statute has since been renumbered and
    amended. The new statutory language requires owners to release
    the lien and post alternate security ―at any time before the date
    that is 90 days after the first summons is served in an action to
    foreclose the preconstruction or construction lien for which the
    notice under this section is submitted for recording.‖ UTAH CODE
    § 38-1a-804(1)(c) (2014) (emphasis added).
    72   
    Id. § 38-1-28(2)(c)(ii).
    20
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                               Opinion of the Court
    lien claimant may be deprived of his right to fully recover his
    legal expenses if the transfer of property to a new owner resets the
    ninety day period.
    ¶ 47 We disagree with 2 Ton‘s interpretation of the statute.
    The amount of alternate security does not affect the court‘s ability
    to ―apportion the costs according to the right of the case,‖ which
    includes awarding the successful party ―a reasonable attorneys‘
    fee.‖73 Section 38-1-28(1)(c) is unambiguous—―[t]he owner of any
    interest in real property‖ may record a notice of release of lien at
    any time ―before the expiration of 90 days after the day on which
    the person filing a notice of release‖ is served with a summons and
    complaint.74      When faced with a question of statutory
    interpretation, our general rule is that we will ―give effect to
    omissions in statutory language‖ by presuming them to be
    purposeful.75 Utah Code section 38-1-28(1) was written to allow
    ―the owner of any interest in real property‖ to record a notice of
    release of lien and substitution of alternate security within ―90
    days after the day on which the person filing . . . is served with a
    summons and lien foreclosure complaint.‖ It does not include
    any language limiting the class of persons entitled to file such a
    release only to original owners, nor does it contain language
    exempting later purchasers from its provisions.
    ¶ 48 2 Ton argues that allowing subsequent owners to post
    alternate security under 38-1-28(1) creates a ―loophole‖ in the
    statute that allows owners and their successors in interest to ―beat
    down a lien claimant who had to incur significant legal expense to
    prove his claim.‖ On that basis, 2 Ton encourages us to hold that
    a release may be recorded and alternate security substituted only
    within ninety days of the date of service on the original owner.
    However, such a restrictive reading is inconsistent with the
    statute‘s plain language, which requires, unequivocally, that the
    release be recorded within ninety days of the date service was
    accomplished on ―the person filing a notice of release‖ who owns
    ―any interest‖ in the property.76 Moreover, 2 Ton‘s concern about
    73   
    Id. §§ 38-1-17,
    38-1-18(1).
    74   
    Id. § 38-1-28(1)(c)
    (emphasis added).
    75   Marion Energy, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 14.
    76   UTAH CODE § 38-1-28(1).
    21
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    a loophole is unfounded. The notice of release of lien and
    substitution of alternate security transforms the action into an
    action against both the alternate security and the owner ―who
    disputes the correctness or validity of the lien.‖77 And the court
    has full discretion under section 38-1-18 to award the successful
    party ―a reasonable attorneys‘ fee.‖78
    ¶ 49 Here, the Thorgaards were subsequent owners of Lot
    30—they purchased the property from BBRP and Washington
    Federal replaced Zions as the lender. Washington Federal was
    served with a summons and lien foreclosure complaint on June
    18, 2010. ―[B]efore the expiration of 90 days after‖ being served,
    Washington Federal made a cash deposit of $14,942 as alternate
    security and at the same time recorded its notice of release of lien
    as required by Utah Code section 38-1-28. Under the plain
    language of the statute, the district court was correct in
    determining that Washington Federal timely recorded its lien
    release.
    ¶ 50 In sum, we conclude that 2 Ton‘s amended and second
    amended notices of lien are invalid because 2 Ton improperly
    amended them to include attorney fees and costs. However
    2 Ton‘s original notice of lien was and remains valid, as not only
    was it properly filed, but the parties stipulated to its validity and
    accuracy. The district court was correct when it held that the
    Thorgaards‘ notice of release of lien and substitution of alternate
    security was timely. But because the Thorgaards timely filed their
    notice of release of lien and because they submitted the proper
    amount of alternate security under section 38-1-28, the district
    court accordingly should have released the real property from the
    lien.
    77   
    Id. 78 See
    also 
    id. § 38-1-28(7)(k)
    (explicitly contemplating an award
    of attorney fees in an action against the alternate security and
    stating that they ―shall be considered . . . under any other
    provision of this chapter‖).
    22
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                             Opinion of the Court
    II. DUE TO ITS ERROR, THE DISTRICT COURT MUST
    RECALCULATE THE ATTORNEY FEE AWARD
    ¶ 51 The Thorgaards ultimately stipulated that the amount of
    the lien claim stated in 2 Ton‘s original notice of lien—$7,147.41—
    was correct. On December 27, 2011, the district court entered a
    judgment against the defendants in the lien foreclosure action,
    which included the Thorgaards and Washington Federal. Because
    2 Ton was the successful party in the lien action, it was entitled to
    have its costs awarded, including reasonable attorney fees.79 On
    April 16, 2012, the district court awarded 2 Ton $44,857.70 in
    attorney fees.
    ¶ 52 The Thorgaards argue that the district court abused its
    discretion when it awarded 2 Ton $44,857.70 in attorney fees.
    Specifically, they argue (1) that the district court improperly failed
    to allocate the attorney fees, first, between the contract and lien
    claims and, second, among the defendants who incurred the
    attorney fees; (2) that the court should have allocated attorney fees
    on a per capita basis to all fourteen lots; and (3) that an award of
    attorney fees that is more than six times the principal lien amount
    is per se unreasonable.
    ¶ 53 ―Calculation of reasonable attorney fees is in the sound
    discretion of the trial court, and will not be overturned in the
    absence of a showing of a clear abuse of discretion.‖80 Though
    ―an award of attorney fees must be supported by evidence in the
    record,‖ ―trial courts enjoy broad discretion in evaluating
    evidence to determine what constitutes a reasonable fee.‖81 In this
    case, the district court abused its discretion by awarding attorney
    fees on the basis of an invalid notice of lien. Therefore, we must
    remand for the district court to recalculate the award after
    considering the fees incurred by the Thorgaards, who had to
    defend themselves against 2 Ton‘s improperly amended notices of
    lien, and whose property was not properly released under Utah
    Code section 38-1-28. In other words, because the improperly
    79   UTAH CODE § 38-1-18(1).
    80  Dixie State Bank v. Bracken, 
    764 P.2d 985
    , 988 (Utah 1988)
    (citation omitted).
    81   
    Id. at 988–89.
    23
    2 TON v. THORGAARD
    Opinion of the Court
    amended notices of lien were an error that permeated almost the
    entire course of the litigation, we remand for the district court to
    recalculate the reasonable attorney fees owed 2 Ton.
    ¶ 54 Mechanics‘ liens are wholly creatures of statute, having
    no place at common law. In this setting, the only access to an
    attorney fees award is that granted by that statute. Attorney fees
    first appear in section 38-1-17 of the Mechanics‘ Lien Act. In this
    section, the court is instructed to apportion costs
    between the owner and the contractor . . . according
    to the right of the case, but in all cases each
    subcontractor exhibiting a lien shall have his costs
    awarded to him, including . . . such reasonable
    attorneys‘ fees as may be incurred in preparing and
    recording said notice of claim of lien.82
    Under Utah Code section 38-1-18, attorney fees must be awarded
    to the successful party in the action to enforce a lien: ―in any
    action brought to enforce any lien under this chapter the
    successful party shall be entitled to recover a reasonable
    attorneys‘ fee, to be fixed by the court, which shall be taxed as
    costs in the action.‖ As the successful party in the lien foreclosure
    action, 2 Ton was entitled to have the court award its costs,
    including reasonable attorney fees.
    ¶ 55 However, because 2 Ton improperly amended its notice
    of lien to reflect an improper calculation, and because the court
    erroneously accepted the amendments and refused to accept the
    alternate security and release the property, we hold that the
    attorney fee award must be reversed. Accordingly, we remand
    for the district court to recalculate 2 Ton‘s reasonable attorney
    fees, and to consider and discount the attorney fees incurred by
    the Thorgaards as a result of the error. Because we reverse the
    award of attorney fees, we need not address the Thorgaards‘
    specific grounds for challenging the award.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶ 1 We conclude that the district court erred when it
    permitted 2 Ton to include attorney fees and costs in the amount
    of its lien claim. Thus, 2 Ton‘s amended and second amended
    82   UTAH CODE § 38-1-17.
    24
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                           Opinion of the Court
    notices of lien were invalid. But 2 Ton‘s original notice of lien was
    valid. The Thorgaards‘ notice of release of lien and substitution of
    alternate security was timely recorded and properly referenced
    2 Ton‘s original notice of lien. Because the Thorgaards complied
    with all statutory requirements, the district court erred in refusing
    to release Lot 30 from the lien. Yet because the Thorgaards
    stipulated to the accuracy of the original lien claim, 2 Ton, as the
    prevailing party, was entitled to recover its costs and a reasonable
    attorney fee award. We hold that the district court must
    recalculate that award after considering the effect of the errors on
    the fees incurred by both parties.
    25