DocketNumber: A163289
Judges: Aoyagi, Hadlock, Linder
Filed Date: 1/3/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
*535This is an appeal from a supplemental judgment in a landlord-tenant action, awarding $2,000 in attorney fees to plaintiff as the prevailing party. In her sole assignment of error, plaintiff, who requested just over $7,000 in attorney fees, contends that the trial court abused its discretion when it awarded her only $2,000 in attorney fees. Defendant has not appeared on appeal. Because we do not have sufficient information about the trial court's reasons for awarding the amount that it did to conduct meaningful appellate review, we vacate the supplemental judgment and remand to the trial court. In doing so, we conclude that plaintiff adequately preserved the alleged substantive error and was not required to request special findings under ORCP 68 C to do so.
The relevant facts are minimal and undisputed for purposes of appeal. Plaintiff agreed to rent a residence from defendant but, upon moving in, discovered that the residence was uninhabitable and moved out. Plaintiff later filed this action, alleging that defendant had breached her statutory obligations as a landlord and had failed to return or account for plaintiff's security deposit. The trial court entered a default order against defendant. It then entered a general judgment in plaintiff's favor for $3,600, plus attorney fees and costs to be determined by supplemental judgment. At that time, plaintiff filed a statement in which she requested $3,054 in attorney fees. Plaintiff also requested costs, but the cost award is not at issue so we do not discuss it.
Soon thereafter, defendant appeared in the action for the first time and filed a series of motions, including two motions for relief from judgment and a motion to dismiss. The trial court denied all of defendant's motions. Thereafter, plaintiff filed an amended attorney fee statement. She requested $7,018.75 in incurred fees, which included both her previously requested fees and her fees to oppose defendant's motions.
Defendant filed written "objections" to the trial court's rulings on her post-judgment motions. Defendant, who had not objected to plaintiff's original fee statement, *536concluded that filing with a one-sentence objection to plaintiff's amended fee request: "In addition, Defendant strenuously objects to Plaintiff's attorney fees as excessive and being taken without authority or authorization."
In response to defendant's objection, plaintiff argued that her requested fees were reasonable given the factors applicable to discretionary fee awards under ORS 20.075. Plaintiff also submitted a declaration from an experienced local attorney regarding the reasonableness *796of the fees. In reply, defendant argued that the amount requested was excessive, this time providing some explanation for that position. Plaintiff filed a surreply, reiterating the legal and factual bases for her fee request.
Neither party requested a hearing on the attorney fee matter, and none was held. The trial court issued a letter opinion that stated in its entirety: "The Court hereby awards attorney fees in the amount of $2,000.00. [Plaintiff's attorney] shall include the amount in the Judgment or shall otherwise prepare the appropriate documents."
On September 13, 2016, the trial court entered a supplemental judgment consistent with its letter opinion. Plaintiff appeals that judgment. She contends that the court abused its discretion by awarding her only $2,000 in fees. See ORS 20.075(3) (review of a discretionary fee award subject to ORS 20.075, including its amount, is for abuse of discretion); McCarthy v. Oregon Freeze Dry, Inc. ,
We turn to our legal analysis. In any action on a rental agreement or arising under ORS chapter 90 (Residential Landlord and Tenant), "reasonable attorney fees at trial and on appeal may be awarded to the prevailing party together with costs and necessary disbursements, notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary." ORS 90.255. Defendant has never disputed that this action is subject to ORS 90.255 and that plaintiff was the prevailing party at trial in this case.
Because ORS 90.255 provides for a discretionary fee award, a trial court must consider all of the factors in *537ORS 20.075(1) and (2) in determining the amount of an award under that statute. ORS 20.075(2) ; see Barbara Parmenter Living Trust v. Lemon ,
• the parties' conduct giving rise to the litigation
• the objective reasonableness of the parties' claims and defenses
• the extent to which an award would deter good faith claims and defenses in similar cases
• the extent to which an award would deter meritless claims and defenses
• the parties' objective reasonableness and diligence during the proceedings
• the parties' objective reasonableness and diligence in pursuing settlement
• the amount awarded as a prevailing party fee under ORS 20.190
• the time and labor required
• the novelty and difficulty of the questions involved
• the skill needed to perform the legal services
• the likelihood that this representation would preclude the attorney from taking other cases (if apparent to the client)
• the fee customarily charged in the locality for similar legal services
• the amount involved in the controversy and results obtained
• the time limitations imposed by the client or circumstances of the case
• the nature and length of the attorney-client relationship
• the attorney's experience and reputation and ability
• the fixed or contingent nature of the fee.
*538ORS 20.075(1) - (2). Additionally, the court must consider "[s]uch other factors as the court may consider appropriate under the circumstances of the case." ORS 20.075(1)(h).
The question before us, then, is whether, on this record and given those factors, the trial court abused its discretion by awarding plaintiff only $2,000 in attorney fees. Our ability to conduct such an analysis, however, faces an immediate obstacle: the lack of any explanation from the trial court as to the basis for its decision.
In some cases, even when a trial court provides little or no explanation for the amount of a discretionary fee award, we are able to glean enough from the record to review the award. The way that the issues were framed by the parties in the trial court, *797the nature and breadth of objections raised, insights from a fee hearing transcript, or obvious relationships between particular objections and the amount awarded all aid in that regard. At the same time, the nature of discretionary fee awards is such that, sometimes, the absence of an explanation makes it impossible in practice to determine whether the court acted within its discretion. First, there are a vast number of potential combinations of factors that could lead to any given award, especially because the trial court has discretion how much weight to give each of the many factors that it must consider. Second, the universe of potential rationales has no clear edges because, in addition to the specific factors listed in ORS 20.075(1) and (2), the trial court must consider any "other factors" that it deems appropriate, ORS 20.075(1)(h). As a result, we may not know what factors a court has considered unless it tells us. Third, and especially problematic, attorney fee awards do not appear to be strictly limited to "the record" in the way that most substantive rulings are. Even when a fee petition is unopposed, the trial court may make its own assessment of the reasonableness of the fees. See ORCP 68 C(4)(f); Council on Court Procedures, Staff Comment to ORCP 68, 32 (Dec. 15, 1990) (the trial court has "discretion to pass on the reasonableness of the amounts claimed," even when there is no objection).
Plaintiff argues that, on this record, the amount of attorney fees that she requested was reasonable ($7,018.75) and the amount of fees that the court awarded was unreasonable ($2,000), and she therefore urges us to reverse and remand with instructions to award the full amount requested. We disagree that that is the correct disposition. Even when an attorney fee request is unopposed, the trial court has discretion in setting the amount of the award and is not required to award the full amount requested. See ORCP 68 C(4)(f). We cannot say that the trial court's only permissible choice in this case was to award the full amount that plaintiff requested, which is what would be necessary to remand with that instruction. To the contrary, it is likely that a range of awards would fall within the court's discretion.
That brings us back to our inability to meaningfully review this fee award and what we should do about it. The leading case on the issue is McCarthy ,
"As a practical matter, this court cannot analyze the record to determine whether a court's decision to award or deny an attorney fee pursuant to statute was an abuse of discretion unless the court, in its findings, identifies the relevant facts and legal criteria on which the court relies in awarding attorney fees."
*798Id. at 96,
We regularly follow McCarthy when we are unable to conduct meaningful appellate review of a fee award. For example, in Lewis v. Beyer ,
That said, there is one wrinkle to that general rule that has arisen since McCarthy and which we address because it pertains to plaintiff's preservation of the alleged error. See Harrison v. Hall ,
Because ORCP 68 C(4)(g) provides an express mechanism to request special findings on attorney fees, a party who wishes to assign error to a trial court's failure to make special findings, as a procedural error, will not have preserved the error unless special findings were requested in the trial court. See Peeples v. Lampert ,
At the same time, a party's choice not to request special findings does not waive the party's right to meaningful appellate review of the substance of a fee award. In Peeples , the Supreme Court addressed the appellate consequences of failing to object to a trial court's lack of special *542findings in support *799of a discretionary ruling. Applying the "usual rules of preservation," the court concluded that a party's failure to object to a lack of special findings in the trial court rendered that alleged procedural error unpreserved for appeal. 345 Or. at 218,
Thus, even if a party had an opportunity to request special findings and did not do so, the party may still challenge the substance of the award on appeal, as long as the party's substantive arguments are preserved. At that point, if the trial court's explanation and findings "are sufficient for efficient and meaningful appellate review," we proceed to the merits. Quick Collect, Inc. v. Higgins ,
*543In this case, plaintiff has assigned error to the substance of the trial court's attorney fee award. Although she mentions the lack of findings, she does not independently assign error to the lack of findings, see Peeples , 345 Or. at 224-25,
Vacated and remanded.
With many rulings, even a general finding with no explanation-a mere finding in favor of one party or the other-is enough in conjunction with the evidentiary record and the record of the parties' arguments to identify the court's possible decision paths and determine whether one of those paths lawfully permitted the result. By contrast, numerous courts, including the Oregon Supreme Court, have recognized that attorney fee awards can be impossible to review without an explanation of the court's reasoning. E.g. , McCarthy , 327 Or. at 96,
See also Frakes v. Nay ,
To the extent that Peeples leaves any room for debate about the relevance of ORCP 68 C(4)(g) to preservation of attorney fee challenges, that gap is filled by an earlier case, Mattiza v. Foster ,
We note that, on remand, the trial court is not required to make "special findings" within the meaning of ORCP 68 C(4)(g)-because plaintiff did not request them-although the rule certainly permits it to do so. It is for the trial court to decide how to provide the necessary information for meaningful appellate review.