Collins v. City of Bryant

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge,

dissenting.

I disagree with the majority’s use of Rule 60 to reinstate the attorney’s-fee award. We should affirm the circuit court’s decision to vacate the award. Doing so would respect a prior precedent from this court, fundamental notions of fairness, and no case from our supreme court requires otherwise.

In November 2010, the circuit court held a trial on the plaintiffs’ complaint. The main issue tried was whether a city employee was authorized to contract with the Collinses on the location of a storm-drainage easement on the Collinses’ property. The jury found for the Collinses and returned a $70,000 verdict in their favor; a judgment on the jury verdict was subsequently entered. The Collinses then moved for an attorney’s-fee award under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-22-308 (Repl.1999), and the circuit court awarded them $27,000 by separate judgment. The city appealed the judgment on the jury verdict. It did not name the fee award in the first notice of appeal. It did not file an amended notice of appeal from the adverse fee award.

This court heard the city’s appeal on the merits and reversed. Here are the final lines in the Collins I opinion: “We reverse the jury’s verdict finding the city liable to the [Collinses].” City of Bryant v. Collins, 2011 Ark. App. 713, at 10, 386 S.W.3d 699, 704. The |fidisposition of the opinion is “Reversed,” not “Reversed and Dismissed.” A mandate was issued in due course; it stated that the case was “reversed for the reasons set out in the attached opinion.”

After the mandate was issued, the city moved the circuit court to vacate the Col-linses’ attorney’s-fee award, arguing that this court’s reversal of the adverse jury verdict meant that the Collinses were no longer a prevailing party under Arkansas law; thus, the related fee award could not stand. As the majority points out, the Collinses here argue that the circuit court lost jurisdiction to vacate the fee award 90 days after its initial entry on 29 March 2011 because the city did not expressly appeal the fee award to this court in Collins I. The majority agrees with the Col-linses’ Rule 60 argument that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to vacate the fee award. I cannot agree that Rule 60 prevents the circuit court from vacating the attorney’s-fee award given this court’s reversal of the very judgment on which the Collinses’ fee award was based.

In my view, an attorney’s-fee award based on Judgment X should fail as a matter of law when Judgment X is wholly vacated on the merits — and the connection between the judgment and the subsequent fee award is clear from the record, as it is here. Because Collins I vacated the judgment that directly supported the Collinses’ fee award, the circuit court in this case correctly granted the City of Bryant’s motion to vacate the fee award. When the Collinses’ breach-of-contract claim was reversed on the merits, their related fee award should have necessarily abated.

This view is not unprecedented. We recently held — without being asked to do so by |7any party — that a reversal of the judgment on a jury verdict necessarily required a reversal of the related attorney’s-fee award as well. The case is Harp v. Security Credit Services, LLC, 2013 Ark. App. 202, at 5, 2013 WL 1228754. And there we held: “The judgment of the trial court is hereby reversed, and the case is remanded to circuit court. Because the underlying judgment that formed the basis for the award of attorney’s fees has been reversed, the order awarding attorney’s fees to appellee is likewise reversed.” The takeaway from Harp is that this court, on its own initiative, reversed the attorney’s-fee award as it vacated the underlying judgment.

Some procedural detail puts Harp’s importance to this case into perspective. The record on file with this court’s clerk and the parties’ appellate briefs in that case show that Joanie Harp, the losing party in the circuit court who was ordered to pay an attorney’s fee to Security Credit Services, LLC, did not appeal the separate fee award. Her only notice of appeal expressly appealed the merits-related judgment against her; the notice did not mention the adverse fee order that the circuit court entered days later. Moreover, Harp’s principal brief on appeal did not raise the adverse fee award as a point in her appeal to this court. That is why our Harp opinion does not state that the fee issue was appealed. It wasn’t. These undisputed procedural facts, joined with this court’s holding, make Harp a controlling precedent here.

Because this court has not followed Harp or explained why it should not be followed, there is, as of today, a conflict in the law on when a prevailing party-turned-losing party may keep a fee award under section 16-22-308.

The Collinses may understandably attach importance to this court’s and our supreme | scourt’s repeated references to the “collateral” nature of an attorney’s-fee award. But if the collateral nature of a fee award is the, or even a, pivotal consideration, then the Harp attorney’s-fee issue would have been decided differently; there simply is no material difference between Harp and this case. The fee award evaporated as a matter of law in Harp when we reversed the judgment on the merits. The same result should issue here.

Moving to our supreme court’s case law, I stated earlier that no precedent requires us to reverse the direct-appeal issue. The Collinses cite Seidenstricker Farms v. Doss, 374 Ark. 123, 286 S.W.3d 142 (2008) to support their Rule 60 jurisdictional argument. I understand, but disagree with, their (and the majority’s) reliance on that case. In Seidenstricker Farms, a four-member majority of the supreme court noted, first and foremost, that the court lacked jurisdiction to decide Seidenstricker Farms ’s fee issue — and for a reason wholly unrelated to Rule 60. In fact, the Rule 60 discussion was unnecessary because Seidenstricker Farms had failed to get a ruling from the circuit court on its motion to vacate the attorney’s-fee award against it in the first place. That failure alone precluded the court from going further. The telling excerpt from the supreme court’s opinion makes the point:

On January 15, 2008, after this court reversed the circuit court’s decision in Seidenstricker [Farms ] I [v. Doss, 372 Ark. 72, 270 S.W.3d 842 (2008) ], Seiden-stricker Farms filed a motion to vacate the order awarding attorney’s fees. In the motion, Seidenstricker Farms argued that after this court’s decision in Seidenstricker I, the Dosses were no longer the “prevailing party” for purposes of Arkansas Code Annotated § 16-22-308 (Repl.1999). The circuit court, however, never ruled on the motion to vacate [the attorney’s-fee award].
Now, on appeal, Seidenstricker Farms makes the same “prevailing party” arguments as it made in the motion to vacate. Unfortunately, because Seiden-stricker Farms did not obtain a ruling on the motion to vacate, its arguments were not preserved for appeal.

Seidenstricker Farms, 374 Ark. at 124, 286 S.W.3d at 143.

True, the supreme court went on to discuss Rule 60, but that discussion is dictum because the court could have stopped at the threshold, the threshold being Seid-enstricker Farms’s failure to get a ruling on its motion to vacate the attorney’s fee while in the circuit court. Our supreme court has “made it clear that it is not bound by any conclusion stated as obiter dictum.” Ward v. Williams, 354 Ark. 168, 176, 118 S.W.3d 513, 518 (2003). It has

further held that while a decision will not be disturbed because it is law of the case, we are not bound by a conclusion stated as obiter dictum, even if couched in terms that imply the court reached a conclusion on a matter. Where discussion or comment in an opinion is not necessary to the decision reached therein, the discussion or comment is obiter dictum.

Id. (internal citations omitted).

This case is materially different from Seidenstricker Farms. Here, the city sought and received from the circuit court an express ruling on its motion to vacate the attorney’s-fee award, and the Collinses directly appealed the adverse ruling. So the core issue-preservation defect that adversely affected Seidenstricker Farms is absent here. It’s also worth mentioning that three justices dissented in Seiden-stricker Farms. And neither this court nor our supreme court has, since Seiden-stricker Farms was decided, cited that case for the proposition the majority has today.

Returning to the big doctrinal picture, this appeal apparently falls between two developed lines of precedent. One line of cases generally holds that unless you expressly appeal an attorney’s-fee award, it is not preserved for review and therefore stands. Cases like Entertainer, Inc. v. Duffy, 2012 Ark. 202, 407 S.W.3d 514 and Craig v. Carrigo, 353 Ark. 761, 121 S.W.3d 154 (2003), exemplify this view. Throughout this group of cases, however, the underlying judgment on the merits that spawned the fee award was partly or wholly upheld. The opposite happened in Collins I; there the judgment was reversed entirely, not upheld. For this important reason, the majority’s reliance on Craig, supra, cannot adequately support the choice to stand silent on why Harp shouldn’t control this case.

A second line of eases supports Professor Howard Brill’s pertinent observation that “the reversal of the-underlying judgment requires reversal of the award of attorney fees.” Howard W. Brill & Christian H. Brill, Law of Damages § 11:3 (5th ed.Supp.2012). Arkansas Supreme Court cases like Pettus v. McDonald, 343 Ark. 507, 36 S.W.3d 745 (2001) support Professor Brill’s statement. In Pettus our supreme court held, “Having reversed the judgment in favor of Appellees, it is unnecessary for this court to address Appellants’ argument [on the $25,000 fee award]. This court has consistently held that when a judgment in favor of a prevailing party is reversed, any award of attorney’s fees must also be reversed.” 343 Ark. at 516-17, 36 S.W.3d at 751. The Pettus line of cases does not, strictly speaking, control this case because those cases do state that the attorney’s-fee award was appealed. That is why this appeal falls between the two prevailing lines of cases relating to the viability of an attorney’s-fee award once a decision on the merits of the underlying judgment has been rendered.

This court’s Harp opinion, to paraphrase Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., reached into the interstitial space this case occupies and decided the fee issue in a way that strongly counsels, if not requires, us to affirm on direct appeal. If we don’t apply Harp now, then we should expressly overrule its holding on the (unappealed) attorney’s-fee issue: “Because the | n underlying judgment that formed the basis for the award of attorney’s fees has been reversed, the order awarding attorney’s fees to appellee is likewise reversed.” Harp, 2013 Ark. App. 202, at 5, 2013 WL 1228754.

The majority, however, has chosen not to apply Hatp or partially overrule it. As a result, a conflict in this court’s case law now exists. And the conflict is not of interest solely to the wild-haired, pocket-protector-wearing legal pedant. Just ask the City of Bryant, which must now pay a $27,000 attorney’s fee to a party whose substantive legal claim it wholly defeated a year and a half ago on appeal. The better practice is for parties to expressly and timely appeal an attorney’s-fee award anytime they may, for any reason, want an appellate court to reverse or modify it. But I am not convinced that Rule 60 bars the circuit court’s decision to vacate the fee award in this case.

As for Collins II, this court should follow Harp and affirm the circuit court’s decision to grant the city’s motion to vacate the fee award. The majority, however, has chosen a different path. It essentially follows Seidenstricker Farms’s dictum on Rule 60; leaves this court’s Harp holding intact, creating a case-law conflict in its wake; and makes it harder to vacate a fee award when basic fairness tells us all that it should no longer stand. Because I don’t share the majority’s views under the circumstances, I respectfully dissent from the decision to reverse the circuit court on direct appeal. I join the majority’s decision to affirm the cross-appeal.