Louis A. Yancich v. New Life Clinics and James T. Bowen ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                   FILED
    June 23, 2021
    STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA                          EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS                              OF WEST VIRGINIA
    Louis Andrew Yancich,
    Plaintiff Below, Petitioner
    vs.) No. 20-0578 (Kanawha County 18-C-968)
    New Life Clinics, Inc., and
    James T. Bowen, individually and in his
    capacity as President of New Life Clinics, Inc.,
    Defendants Below, Respondents
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Petitioner Louis Andrew Yancich, by counsel Travis A. Griffith, appeals the Circuit
    Court of Kanawha County’s July 10, 2020, order denying his motion for attorney’s fees and
    costs, which motion was filed after the parties entered into a settlement agreement waiving
    petitioner’s right to any attorney’s fees. Respondents New Life Clinics, Inc., and James T.
    Bowen, individually and in his capacity as President of New Life Clinics, Inc., by counsel
    Matthew A. Nelson and James A. Kirby III, filed a response. Petitioner filed a reply.
    This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal
    arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided
    by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record
    presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these
    reasons, a memorandum decision affirming the circuit court’s order is appropriate under Rule 21
    of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    Petitioner sued respondents on July 31, 2018, asserting claims for violation of the Wage
    Payment and Collection Act (“WPCA”), 1 quantum meruit, breach of contract, promissory
    estoppel and unjust enrichment, and sought to pierce the corporate veil. Petitioner served as the
    medical director for Respondent New Life Clinics, Inc. (“Respondent Clinic”), and his claims
    stemmed from Respondent Clinic’s alleged failure to pay him in accordance with the terms of his
    “Independent Physician Agreement” (“physician agreement”) and respondents’ alleged unlawful
    termination of that contract. Because the physician agreement contained an arbitration provision,
    the circuit court granted respondents’ motion to compel arbitration and to dismiss the case on
    December 11, 2018.
    1
    See 
    W. Va. Code §§ 21-5-1
     through -18.
    1
    Following dismissal, the parties agreed to mediate the matter rather than arbitrate, and
    they reached a settlement on July 22, 2019. Among other terms set forth in the parties’ settlement
    agreement, respondents agreed to pay petitioner $40,000 and return certain personal property to
    him by October 20, 2019. October 20, 2019, came and went, however, without respondents
    tendering the settlement funds or personal property. Accordingly, petitioner filed a “Motion to
    Reopen Case to Enforce Settlement Agreement” in October of 2019.
    At a hearing in November of 2019 on petitioner’s motion to reopen and enforce the
    settlement, he explained that the parties had mediated and settled the matter and that their
    settlement agreement had been reduced to writing. The circuit court said, “All right, you may
    reduce it to a judgment order,” and on November 13, 2019, the court entered a judgment order
    granting petitioner’s motion to reopen “for the limited purpose of this order only” and entering
    judgment against respondents in the amount of $40,000, plus pre- and post-judgment interest.
    With respect to the items of personal property identified in the parties’ settlement agreement, the
    court’s order stated that “this matter shall be treated as an action in REPLEVIN” and entered
    judgment for the return of the specified items of personal property.
    On April 2, 2020, respondents paid the full amount of the monetary judgment, including
    pre-judgment and post-judgment interest, and on April 15, 2020, they returned the identified
    personal property.
    On April 29, 2020, petitioner filed a “Motion for an Award of Attorney[’s] Fees and
    Costs” under the WPCA for attorney’s fees and costs expended since late June 2018. 2 Petitioner
    claimed that the circuit court’s “entry of judgment against [respondents] is the equivalent of a
    court entering judgment against a defendant based upon a verdict rendered by a jury. Thus, based
    upon this judgment, [petitioner] substantially prevailed and is entitled to an award of reasonable
    attorney[’s] fees and costs.”
    In respondents’ response to petitioner’s motion for attorney’s fees, they noted that
    petitioner filed his motion to reopen the case specifically to enforce the settlement agreement,
    that petitioner did not seek attorney’s fees in that motion, and that the court’s order on that
    motion granted petitioner’s motion “for the limited purposes of this Order,” referring to the
    court’s judgment order. In other words, the court reopened the case for the limited purpose of
    enforcing the settlement agreement, which amounted to entering judgment against respondents in
    the amount agreed upon in the settlement agreement, and respondents satisfied that judgment.
    Respondents also highlighted petitioner’s release of respondents in the parties’ settlement
    agreement:
    2
    The WPCA permits a court to, “in the event that any judgment is awarded to the
    plaintiff or plaintiffs, assess costs of the action, including reasonable attorney[’s] fees against the
    defendant.” 
    W. Va. Code § 21-5-12
    (b).
    2
    a.       Release of [Respondent Clinic]. [Petitioner] intends to settle and/or
    waive any and all claims he has or may have against [Respondent Clinic], in
    addition to any current or former officers, employees, including but not limited to
    [Respondent] James T. Bowen, attorneys, agents, assigns, insurers,
    representatives, counsel, benefit plan administrators, other administrators,
    successors, parent companies, subsidiaries, affiliates, shareholders and/or
    directors of [Respondent Clinic] (collectively, the “Released Parties”), for
    anything that has occurred up to the date of the execution of this Agreement,
    including but not limited to, any and all claims resulting from [petitioner’s]
    employment with [Respondent Clinic] and/or [petitioner’s] contractual
    relationship with [Respondent Clinic], and his separation from employment or
    association with [Respondent Clinic], and any and all claims asserted or that
    could have been asserted in the Civil Action. For the consideration expressed
    herein, [petitioner] hereby releases and discharges the Released Parties from all
    liability for damages, affirmative or equitable relief, judgments or attorneys’ fees,
    and agrees not to institute any claim for damages, affirmative or equitable relief,
    judgments or attorneys’ fees, and agrees not to institute any claim for damages,
    affirmative or equitable relief, judgments or attorneys’ fees, by charge or
    otherwise, nor authorize any other party, governmental or otherwise, to institute
    any claim to recover damages, affirmative or equitable relief, judgments or
    attorneys’ fees on his behalf via administrative or legal proceedings against the
    Released Parties for any damages, judgments or attorneys’ fees, including but not
    limited to, any claims arising under or based upon the West Virginia Wage
    Payment and Collection[] Act, 
    W. Va. Code § 21-5-1
    , et seq. up through the date
    of his execution of this Agreement. Nothing in the foregoing release is intended to
    release any claim that cannot be released as a matter of law.
    The circuit court denied petitioner’s motion on July 10, 2020. The court relied on the
    release set forth in the settlement agreement, quoted above, and noted that that paragraph stated
    in four places that petitioner waived all claims for attorney’s fees. The paragraph further
    specifically set forth petitioner’s waiver of any and all claims for attorney’s fees under the
    WPCA—the precise statute under which petitioner was seeking his award of attorney’s fees.
    Petitioner now appeals.
    Petitioner raises three assignments of error, all of which pertain to the circuit court’s
    denial of his motion for attorney’s fees. 3 The arguments addressed in his assignments of error
    3
    Although petitioner sets forth three assignments of error, the “Argument” section of his
    brief addresses two primary arguments, each with a number of sub-arguments. Irrespective of
    how petitioner has presented his assignments of error, all of his arguments relate to the circuit
    court’s denial of his motion for attorney’s fees. Accordingly, his arguments have been
    aggregated and recounted collectively.
    (continued . . .)
    3
    can be distilled into four points. First, petitioner claims that the court erred in concluding that the
    parties’ settlement agreement was dispositive on the issue of fees when respondents breached
    that agreement by failing to pay the settlement amount and return petitioner’s property by the
    established deadline. Petitioner asserts that the contractual relationship no longer existed, so the
    court could not rely on it to find that petitioner waived his right to attorney’s fees and costs.
    Second, petitioner contends that the court’s judgment order “substantively resolved the matter.”
    That is, because petitioner’s underlying WPCA claim contained a fee-shifting provision, the
    court’s judgment order amounted to a judgment on that claim, thereby entitling him to fees under
    the applicable statute. Third, petitioner asserts that the court erred in failing to consider that the
    WPCA “is remedial legislation designed to protect working people and assist them in the
    collection of compensation wrongly withheld.” Clendenin Lumber & Supply Co., Inc., v.
    Carpenter, 
    172 W. Va. 375
    , 380, 
    305 S.E.2d 332
    , 337 (1983) (citation omitted). Thus, collection
    of the compensation owed is contemplated by the WPCA. Fourth and finally, petitioner argues
    that the court’s denial of his motion will dissuade plaintiffs from settling and force them to trial
    because the court has, in effect, incentivized avoiding settlement obligations. “[I]n the absence of
    the required aspects of fee-shifting statutes, [d]efendants could simply ignore their obligations,
    fail to pay the same and have no consequences,” petitioner maintains.
    “This Court has held that ‘[t]he decision to award or not to award attorney’s fees rests in
    the sound discretion of the circuit court, and the exercise of that discretion will not be disturbed
    on appeal except in cases of abuse.’” Corp. of Harpers Ferry v. Taylor, 
    227 W. Va. 501
    , 504,
    
    711 S.E.2d 571
    , 574 (2011).
    We begin by placing this case in its proper procedural context: since its December of
    2018 dismissal of petitioner’s complaint, no WPCA claim has existed between the parties before
    the circuit court. Rather, the parties were before the circuit court to address enforcement of their
    settlement of that and other claims. While petitioner makes much of respondents’ breach of the
    settlement agreement and the underlying purpose of the WPCA, he ignores that he moved,
    despite any breach, to enforce that agreement, and it is on that agreement that the circuit court
    entered judgment. Petitioner’s claims against respondent, including his WPCA claim, were not
    revived by his filing of a motion to enforce the settlement agreement, nor was there a judgment
    on or substantive resolution of those claims by the court’s entry of its judgment order. The
    In addition, petitioner argues for the first time in his reply brief, “[w]ithout waiving the
    arguments made” in his initial brief, that “the day after the settlement agreement was signed, the
    fee meter was running once again based on [r]espondents’ breach.” In support, he highlights the
    language in the settlement agreement specifying that the release is “for anything that has
    occurred up to the date of the execution of this Agreement.” Petitioner does not include
    “citations that pinpoint when and how the issue[] . . . [was] presented to the lower tribunal,” in
    violation of Rule 10(c)(7) of this Court’s Rules of Appellate Procedure, nor does our review of
    the appendix record indicate that he raised this argument below. “Our general rule is that
    nonjurisdictional questions . . . raised for the first time on appeal, will not be considered.” Noble
    v. W. Va. Dep’t of Motor Vehicles, 
    223 W. Va. 818
    , 821, 
    679 S.E.2d 650
    , 653 (2009) (citation
    omitted). Consistent with this authority, we decline to consider this argument.
    4
    court’s judgment was rendered on the parties’ settlement agreement, which, again, petitioner had
    moved to enforce.
    Part of the settlement agreement that petitioner successfully enforced was a waiver of any
    claim for attorney’s fees under the WPCA. Unquestionably, enforcement of the agreement,
    including respondents’ payment of $40,000 and the return of personal property to petitioner—of
    which he acknowledges receipt—likewise requires enforcement of the provision waiving
    attorney’s fees.
    Petitioner’s policy arguments are similarly unavailing because, first, they do not serve to
    release him from the agreement into which he entered and of which he sought enforcement.
    Second, they ignore a litigant’s ability to negotiate settlement terms that address identified
    concerns, such as a term allowing recoupment of attorney’s fees and costs incurred in enforcing
    the settlement agreement. No such provision is present here, however.
    Put simply, petitioner entered into a settlement agreement waiving his right to collect
    attorney’s fees under the WPCA. Petitioner moved to enforce that settlement agreement, the
    circuit court granted petitioner’s motion and entered judgment on that agreement, and
    respondents paid the agreed-upon settlement funds and returned the specified personal property.
    Petitioner will not now be heard to complain that he should not be bound by the agreement he
    sought to enforce or that the agreement “failed and should not have been enforced.” 4
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    ISSUED: June 23, 2021
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Evan H. Jenkins
    Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
    Justice Tim Armstead
    Justice John A. Hutchison
    Justice William R. Wooton
    4
    We further note that petitioner’s intimation that the court erred in enforcing the
    settlement agreement he moved to enforce is not well taken. If petitioner could establish error,
    his claim would fail under the invited error doctrine. “A litigant may not silently acquiesce to an
    alleged error, or actively contribute to such error, and then raise that error as a reason for reversal
    on appeal.” Syl. Pt. 2, Hopkins v. DC Chapman Ventures, Inc., 
    228 W. Va. 213
    , 
    719 S.E.2d 381
    (2011) (citation omitted). “A judgment will not be reversed for any error in the record introduced
    by or invited by the party seeking reversal.” 
    Id. at 215
    , 719 S.E.2d at 383, Syl. Pt. 3 (citation
    omitted).
    5