DocketNumber: No. 26070
Judges: Burnett, Moore, Pleicones, Toal, Waller
Filed Date: 11/28/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The circuit court found it lacked jurisdiction to entertain Appellants’ post-remittitur request for attorneys’ fees because this Court’s mandate instructed the circuit court to dismiss the appeal without prejudice. The circuit court also declined to entertain Appellants’ “Motion to Shorten Time and Determine Compliance with Supreme Court Order.” Appellants appeal. We agree with Appellants that the circuit court had jurisdiction over the attorneys’ fees request, but hold that Appellants were not prejudiced by the circuit court’s ruling since they are not entitled to attorneys’ fees here, and agree with the circuit court that it lacked jurisdiction to determine compliance with our Order. We therefore affirm.
In Brackenbrook North Charleston, LP v. County of Charleston, 360 S.C. 390, 602 S.E.2d 39 (2004) (Brackenbrook I), the parties cross-appealed from a number of circuit court orders, including one denying Respondents’ motion to dismiss the matter pursuant to S.C.Code Arm. § 12-60-3390 (2000 and Supp. 2003). We found this issue dispositive of both appeals, and “reverse[d] the circuit court orders and remand[ed] this matter with instructions to dismiss the suit without prejudice to [Appellants’] rights to pursue their refund requests” through administrative remedies. Id. at 399, 602 S.E.2d at 44-45. Following this disposition of the appeals, the Court ordered the following extraordinary relief to, as Appellants characterize them in their brief, “wronged non-party taxpayers:”
We are deeply concerned that other taxpayers within the class certified by the circuit court judge in this case may have forgone their administrative remedies in reliance on the orders issued in this case. For this reason, and because County concedes, as it must, that it is required to return the unlawfully collected taxes, we instruct that all taxpayers within the class who have not yet filed administrative refund actions shall have 120 days after the remittitur is sent to file such claims. Notice of this right shall be given to all eligible taxpayers, in writing, by County within thirty days of the filing of this opinion.
Id. at 399-400, 602 S.E.2d at 45.
After the remittitur in Brackenbrook I was returned to the circuit court, Appellants filed a “Petition and Motion for Award of Attorneys’ Fees” and a “Motion to Shorten Time and Determine Compliance with Supreme Court Order.” The Compliance Motion sought to have the circuit court decide whether Respondents had properly identified and notified all eligible non-party taxpayers as required by this Court in Brackenbrook I; to determine whether Respondents had accurately calculated the amount of the refunds; to determine when those refunds would be received; and to hear any other issues which might arise from the implementation of this Court’s order requiring Respondents to give notice.
ISSUES
1) Whether the circuit court properly dismissed Appellants’ motion for attorneys’ fees?
2) Whether the circuit court properly declined to entertain Appellants’ motion to determine compliance with our order?
ANALYSIS
A. Attorneys’ Fees
Appellants’ requests for attorneys’ fees pursuant to S.C.Code Ann. § 15-77-300 (2005)
The circuit court erred in finding it lacked jurisdiction to consider Appellants’ statutory attorneys’ fees request. Jurisdiction over the case vests in the circuit court upon receipt of the remittitur from the appellate court. See e.g. Martin v. Paradise Cove Manna, Inc., 348 S.C. 379, 559 S.E.2d 348 (Ct.App.2001) (jurisdiction of the circuit court to hear matters related to case after the issuance of remittitur is well-established). We find, however, that Appellants cannot show prejudice warranting reversal stemming from the circuit court’s error.
Section 15-77-300 permits the prevailing party in a civil action to recover attorneys’ fees from an opposing political subdivision party under certain conditions. Attorneys’ fees may be awarded if the court finds the agency acted without substantial justification in pressing its claim, and if there are no special circumstances that would make an attorney’s fee award unjust. Id. Here, the “claim” pressed by Respondents in Brackenbrook I was that the circuit court was not the proper forum for adjudicating Appellants’ tax refund request, the very issue upon which Respondents prevailed on appeal. Appellants cannot meet the statutory requirement of demonstrating that Respondents acted without substantial justification.
B. Motion to Shorten Time and Determine Compliance
Appellants contend that upon receipt of the remittitur, the circuit court was vested with authority to enforce this
The notification requirement originated with this Court in an effort to treat non-parties fairly, and to expedite the refunds due them. Respondents’ failure to comply with this directive would offend this Court, not the circuit court. If a person within the class created by our directive were aggrieved by Respondents’ failure to comply with it, then her remedy would be a Rule to Show Cause filed in this Court.
The circuit court did not err in finding it lacked jurisdiction over Appellants’ “Motion to Shorten Time and Determine Compliance with Supreme Court Order.”
CONCLUSION
The circuit court properly declined to entertain Appellants’ Motion to Shorten Time and Determine Compliance. While it erred in refusing to hear Appellants’ motion for a statutory attorneys’ fee, Appellants cannot demonstrate any resulting prejudice. Accordingly, the circuit court order is
AFFIRMED.
. Appellants also sought to recover attorneys' fees under a “common fund” theory. See e.g. Petition of Crum, 196 S.C. 528, 14 S.E.2d 21 (1941) (under certain circumstances court has equitable jurisdiction to award an attorney's fee to a party creating or preserving a common fund). At oral argument, however, Appellants informed the Court they were no longer pursuing this theory as the basis for a fee award.
. S.C.Code Ann. §§ 15-77-300 through -340 (2005).
. We do not suggest that Respondents’ conduct throughout this entire tax fiasco has been 'substantially justified.' The statutory attorneys’ fees relate to the civil action only, where Respondents' defense was successful.
. Appellants, having already filed for an administrative refund, were not beneficiaries of the Court’s notification directive to Respondents.