No. 123,581
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
HAROLD JOHNSON,
Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF FOREST LAKES MASTER ASSOCIATION,
Appellee.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
1.
When an appellate court's decision and mandate is fully determinative of the issues
presented in the proceedings below, they become a part of the judgment in the case
without further order of the trial court. This is because there is no need to remand the case
to the trial court with directions to take a certain action when the appellate court has fully
decided the disputed issues in a case. It is only when an appellate court's mandate does
not fully determine the issues pending before the trial court that directions are necessary
or appropriate to control the conduct of further proceedings to resolve any remaining
issues.
2.
When an appellate court's mandate or opinion reverses one issue with directions
but includes no directions as to another issue it decided on appeal, the appellate court's
lack of directions as to this other issue simply means that the appellate court has fully
decided that other issue on appeal.
1
3.
The plain language of K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 lacks a deadline requiring
prevailing parties to move for attorney fees by a certain date but includes fair and explicit
notice that except in rare instances, the trial court may award the prevailing party
reasonable attorney fees upon the prevailing party's motion for reasonable attorney fees.
Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; ERIC A. COMMER, judge. Opinion filed December 10,
2021. Reversed and remanded with directions.
Michael R. Andrusak, of Adams Jones Law Firm, P.A., of Wichita, for appellant.
T. Chet Compton, of Fleeson, Gooing, Coulson & Kitch, L.L.C., of Wichita, for appellee.
Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GREEN and BUSER, JJ.
GREEN, J.: Harold Johnson appeals the trial court's order denying his request for
trial court attorney fees upon remand from our decision in Johnson v. Board of Directors
of Forest Lakes Master Assoc., No. 120,145, 2019 WL 7207550 (Kan. App. 2019)
(unpublished opinion), rev. denied 312 Kan. 892 (2020)—a case where we reversed the
trial court's order granting the Board of Directors of Forest Lakes Master Association's
summary judgment motion and remanded with directions to grant Johnson's summary
judgment motion. On appeal, Johnson argues that the trial court wrongly denied his
motion for attorney fees because it did so based on an errant interpretation of the Johnson
court's mandate. Indeed, because a review of the trial court's decision establishes that it
clearly misinterpreted the Johnson court's mandate when denying Johnson's motion upon
remand from Johnson, we reverse and remand with directions that the trial court consider
and then rule on the merits of Johnson's motion for attorney fees.
2
In the first part of this opinion, we will be discussing attorney fees incurred at the
trial level. In the last section of this opinion, however, we will be discussing attorney fees
incurred at the appellate level.
FACTS
In Johnson, we held: (1) that Johnson had standing to sue the Board, (2) that the
trial court wrongly granted the Board's summary judgment motion, and (3) that the trial
court wrongly denied Johnson's summary judgment motion. There, the Board and
Johnson's primary dispute involved whether the Board violated the Association's
Declaration of Covenants and Bylaws' voting procedures when trying to pass an
amendment to change those procedures. 2019 WL 7207550, at *1-5. In the end, because
the record on appeal established that the Board had violated its voting procedures as
argued by Johnson in his summary judgment motion, we "reverse[d] the trial court's order
granting summary judgment in favor of the Board and direct[ed] the trial court to grant
summary judgment in favor of Johnson." (Emphasis added.) 2019 WL 7207550, at *1.
Nevertheless, in addition to this voting procedure dispute, in Johnson, we
addressed the parties' competing arguments regarding trial court attorney fees. Even
though the Board asserted that the trial court properly awarded it attorney fees, we
reversed the trial court's award since it hinged on its errant decision to grant the Board's
summary judgment motion. 2019 WL 7207550, at *15. And after Johnson moved for
appellate attorney fees, we denied Johnson's motion because it was untimely. 2019 WL
7207550, at *14. Similarly, Johnson argued that he was entitled to trial court attorney
fees. But we held that Johnson's request was not properly before us for the following
reason:
"In his petition, Johnson requested attorney fees. Yet, after making this request,
Johnson did not request attorney fees again. That is, he did not assert he was entitled to
3
attorney fees in his summary judgment motion. Nor did he file a separate motion for
attorney fees. After filing his petition, Johnson only referenced attorney fees when
discussing why the Board was not entitled to attorney fees. As a result, the issue of
whether Johnson was entitled to attorney fees was not before the trial court when it
denied his motion for summary judgment.
"Issues not raised before the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on
appeal. Wolfe Electric, Inc. v. Duckworth, 293 Kan. 375, 403, 266 P.3d 516 (2011).
Because Johnson did not request attorney fees in his summary judgment motion, Johnson
cannot request that we grant his request for trial court attorney fees for the first time on
appeal." (Emphasis added.) 2019 WL 7207550, at *14.
Then, after refusing to consider Johnson's attorney fees request since he was
raising it for the first time on appeal, the Johnson court gave an alternative reason for
denying Johnson's request:
"Furthermore, even if we assumed for argument's sake that the issue of Johnson's attorney
fees was before the trial court, Johnson did not object to the trial court's failure to make
findings of fact or rulings of law on his attorney fee request. Johnson had the burden of
objecting to the trial court's findings and rulings if he believed them inadequate.
Consequently, we must presume that the trial court found all necessary facts and rulings
for its judgment. Thus, Johnson's request for trial court attorney fees fails for this reason
as well. See In re Marriage of Knoll, 52 Kan. App. 2d 930, 941, 381 P.3d 490 (2016)
(holding that a party who fails to object to the trial court's inadequate attorney fees
findings and rulings cannot claim error on appeal)." 2019 WL 7207550, at *14.
Once Johnson's case was remanded to the trial court upon our Supreme Court's
denial of the Board's petition for review, Johnson filed a motion for attorney fees. In this
motion, Johnson asserted that because the Johnson court had held that "the issue of
whether [he] was entitled to attorney fees was not before the trial court when it denied his
motion for summary judgment," he could now move for attorney fees. In particular, he
asserted that because he had never formally moved for attorney fees yet had still asked
4
for them in his original petition, "there remain[ed] one claim in [his] case that ha[d] not
been resolved."
To support his argument, Johnson pointed to the plain language of K.S.A. 2020
Supp. 58-4621(a)—the statute that allowed him to request reasonable attorney fees
because he successfully sued the Board for violating the Kansas Uniform Common
Interest Owners Bill of Rights Act. See K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4601. He noted that
subsection (c) of K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 required the trial court to "liberally
administer[]" the provision so that he, as "the aggrieved party" was "put in as good a
position" as if the Board had never violated the Act. And Johnson argued that our
Supreme Court's decision in Bussman v. Safeco Ins. Co. of America, 298 Kan. 700, 317
P.3d 70 (2014), stood for the proposition that a prevailing party may move for attorney
fees postjudgment. He thus asked the trial court to award him reasonable attorney fees,
which he alleged totaled $52,254.76. At the same time, in his motion, Johnson also asked
the trial court to award him trial court costs, which he alleged totaled $958.80.
Even though the Board largely ignored Johnson's request for trial court costs, it
responded that the trial court should deny Johnson's motion for attorney fees. It asserted
that Johnson was not entitled to such fees because we ruled on the merits of his attorney
fees request in Johnson, deciding the issue against him. It argued that this meant that the
law of the case doctrine now barred Johnson from moving for attorney fees upon remand.
In support of its argument, the Board stressed that in summarizing the attorney
fees issues in Johnson, that court held that "neither party [was] entitled to any attorney
fees." 2019 WL 7207550, at *1. It further asserted that by not requesting attorney fees in
the trial court's pretrial conference order, Johnson had forever abandoned any claim he
may have had about his right to attorney fees. As a result, the Board asked the trial court
to deny Johnson's motion for attorney fees without considering the merits, i.e., the
reasonableness, of the actual attorney fees that Johnson had requested in his motion.
5
After the Board filed its response, Johnson filed a reply addressing the Board's
assertion that the pretrial conference order needed to include his attorney fees request. He
argued that nothing under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621's plain language stated that he had
to move for attorney fees before the trial court entered the pretrial conference order. Still
not entirely clear, it also seems that Johnson argued that our Supreme Court's decision in
Bussman as well as our decision in Harder v. Foster, 54 Kan. App. 2d 444, 401 P.3d
1032 (2017), supported that he could move for attorney fees postjudgment. Alternatively,
he moved to amend the pretrial conference order to include his request for attorney fees.
He noted that K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 60-216(e)—the provision governing pretrial conference
orders—and Bussman supported that such orders could later be amended "to prevent
manifest injustice." Then, citing to this precedent as well as the Johnson court's holding
that he was entitled to summary judgment because the Board had violated its voting
procedures, Johnson argued that under the assumption the pretrial conference order
needed to include his attorney fee request, the trial court should now amend the pretrial
conference order to include his request. He asserted that under the facts of his case, the
trial court's denial of his motion to amend would cause him manifest injustice.
Eventually, the trial court held a hearing where it granted Johnson's motion for
summary judgment as directed by the Johnson court and considered Johnson's pending
motion for attorney fees and costs. The trial court granted Johnson's motion for trial court
costs totaling $958.80. But it denied Johnson's motion for attorney fees totaling
$52,254.76. It concluded that it could not grant Johnson's motion because on appeal, the
Johnson court had "ruled on the merits" of his attorney fees request. It then adopted the
Board's argument regarding the law of the case doctrine. Relying on the law of the case
doctrine, it determined that because the Johnson court held that Johnson had failed to
preserve his attorney fees argument for appeal, "[l]ogic dictate[d]" that he could not move
for attorney fees upon remand.
6
In making this determination, the trial court stressed that the Johnson court's
mandate "did not include directions to review the issue of attorney fees." As for the
Board's argument that Johnson abandoned his ability to move for attorney fees because
he had not requested such fees in the pretrial conference order, the trial court agreed with
Johnson that generally, it could still amend the pretrial conference order to include his
attorney fees request upon his showing of manifest injustice. But it denied Johnson's
motion to amend the pretrial conference order because it found that the amendment was
impermissible "under the circumstances in [his] case." And it noted that even though
Johnson had relied on Harder while arguing that he could still move for attorney fees
postjudgment, it found Johnson's reliance on the Harder decision unpersuasive because
Johnson's case was factually distinguishable from the Harder decision.
Johnson timely appeals the trial court's denial of his motion for attorney fees.
ANALYSIS
Did the trial court err when denying Johnson's motion for attorney fees upon remand?
As he did before the trial court, Johnson argues that he could move for attorney
fees upon remand and postjudgment. In making his argument, Johnson asserts that the
trial court misinterpreted our mandate from Johnson. According to Johnson, the Johnson
court's mandate did not address the merits of his argument about attorney fees. Johnson
therefore contends that despite the trial court's ruling otherwise, the Johnson court's
mandate did not bar him from moving for attorney fees upon remand. In making his
argument, Johnson also continues to rely on Bussman, which he contends establishes that
parties may move for attorney fees postjudgment. So Johnson asks us to reverse the trial
court's denial of his motion for attorney fees and remand his case to the trial court with
directions that it address the merits of his motion.
7
The Board, in contrast, argues that we should affirm the trial court's denial of
Johnson's motion for attorney fees for two reasons. To begin with, the Board argues that
Johnson has abandoned any argument that he may have had regarding his right to
attorney fees by not addressing the trial court's alternative reason for denying his motion
upon remand. According to the Board, when the trial court denied Johnson's motion, the
trial court adopted its argument that Johnson could not move for attorney fees because its
pretrial conference order did not include Johnson's request for attorney fees. After
making this assertion, the Board notes that in his appellant's brief, Johnson never
addresses the trial court's alternative reason for denying his motion. Based on this, the
Board concludes that Johnson has abandoned any argument that he may have had about
the validity of the trial court's alternative reason for denying his motion. Thus, the Board
argues that we may simply affirm the trial court's alternative reason for denying Johnson's
motion for attorney fees without reaching the merits of Johnson's complaints about the
trial court's interpretation of the Johnson court's mandate.
Next, the Board asserts that regardless of the preceding, the trial court properly
interpreted the Johnson court's mandate as barring it from considering Johnson's motion
for attorney fees upon remand. In making its argument, the Board asserts that the Johnson
court rejected Johnson's request for attorney fees "no less than six times." And it notes
that the Johnson opinion included explicit remand directions to grant Johnson's summary
judgment motion while including no directions involving Johnson's attorney fees request.
It then points to the Johnson court's alternative ruling when rejecting Johnson's attorney
fees request. It notes the Johnson court's alternative ruling that under the assumption that
Johnson was not raising his argument for the first time on appeal, this court would
nonetheless presume that the trial court found all facts necessary to reject Johnson's
attorney fees request since Johnson never objected to the trial court's failure to rule on the
attorney fees issue when denying his summary judgment motion. The Board contends
that by making this alternative ruling, the Johnson court addressed the merits of
Johnson's attorney fees request. So, the Board argues that at the very least, we should
8
affirm the trial court's denial of Johnson's motion because it correctly interpreted the
Johnson court's mandate as barring it from considering any issues involving Johnson's
right to attorney fees upon remand.
In his reply brief, Johnson takes issue with the Board's assertion that the trial court
had an alternative reason for denying his motion for attorney fees. He contends that the
trial court never adopted the Board's argument that he abandoned his ability to challenge
the trial court's denial of his motion by not ensuring that the pretrial conference order
included his attorney fees request. Instead, Johnson contends that the trial court simply
denied his motion to amend the pretrial conference order because it believed that the
Johnson court's mandate required this result even if he established the amendment's
necessity upon a showing of manifest injustice. Hence, Johnson argues that he has not
abandoned his ability to challenge the trial court's denial of his motion by failing to
address the trial court's nonexistent alternative reason for denying his motion.
As considered below, Johnson's arguments about the trial court's denial of his
motion for attorney fees are persuasive. In summary, a review of the applicable law in
light of the Johnson court's mandate establishes that the trial court misinterpreted the
Johnson opinion when denying Johnson's motion upon remand. Contrary to the trial
court's interpretation, nothing within the Johnson opinion barred Johnson from moving
for attorney fees upon remand. Also, Kansas law supports that Johnson could move for
attorney fees postjudgment. For this reason, we reverse and remand to the trial court with
directions that it consider and then rule on the merits of Johnson's motion for attorney
fees.
9
Johnson's challenge to the trial court's denial of his motion for attorney fees is
properly before us.
When appellees question whether appellants have properly preserved their
arguments for appeal, appellees raise questions of law over which this court exercises
unlimited review. See State v. Campbell, 308 Kan. 763, 770, 423 P.3d 539 (2018). To
preserve their arguments for appeal, appellants must directly challenge the trial court's
disputed decision in their appellant briefs. And it is a well-known rule of this court that
appellants abandon any arguments about judicial decisions that they fail to raise in their
appellant briefs. See In re Marriage of Williams, 307 Kan. 960, 977, 417 P.3d 1033
(2018).
Here, the Board contends that Johnson abandoned his ability to challenge the trial
court's denial of his motion for attorney fees because Johnson failed to address the trial
court's alternative reason for denying his motion. Again, the Board asserts that in denying
Johnson's motion, the trial court adopted its argument that Johnson's failure to ensure that
the pretrial conference order included his attorney fees request forever barred Johnson
from later moving for attorney fees. But as argued by Johnson, the Board's interpretation
of the trial court's decision as having an alternative reason for denying his motion is
incorrect. A fair reading of the trial court's decision shows that the trial court's entire
basis for denying Johnson's motion hinged on its belief that the Johnson court's mandate
prevented Johnson from moving for attorney fees upon remand.
In its written order denying Johnson's motion, the trial court started its analysis by
finding "that [the] Court of Appeals had ruled on the merits of Johnson's request for
attorney fees." And for this reason, it explained that it "could not modify what a higher
court ha[d] resolved." After this, it further explained that while it "agree[d] with
[Johnson's] argument that 'manifest injustice' [was] the proper standard" for amending
pretrial conference orders, it could not consider Johnson's motion to amend the pretrial
10
conference order "under the circumstances in [Johnson's] case." Hence, in its written
order, the trial court found that the circumstances of Johnson's case prevented it from
considering his motion for attorney fees upon remand.
The only circumstances concerning Johnson's case that the trial court discussed in
its written order, however, involved its belief that the Johnson court's mandate prevented
it from considering Johnson's motion for attorney fees upon remand. Hence, the trial
court's written order establishes that the court did not adopt the Board's argument that
Johnson's failure to include his attorney fees request in the pretrial conference order
forever barred Johnson from later moving for attorney fees. Instead, a review of the
written order shows that the trial court denied both Johnson's motion for attorney fees
and motion to amend the pretrial conference order to include his attorney fees request just
because it believed that the Johnson court's mandate prevented it from even considering
those motions.
What is more, before it entered its written order, the trial court orally denied
Johnson's motion for attorney fees and motion to amend the pretrial conference order at
the end of his motion hearing. In doing so, the trial court expressly stated that it believed
the Johnson court's mandate, which it described as "harsh," prevented it from granting
Johnson's motion to amend the pretrial conference order. And it recognized that
ordinarily, it could still amend the pretrial conference order to include Johnson's attorney
fees request upon Johnson's showing of manifest injustice. Nevertheless, the trial court
stated that it could not grant Johnson's motion to amend because under its interpretation
of the Johnson opinion, the Johnson court required him to move for attorney fees before
it entered judgment on his summary judgment motion.
In short, both the trial court's written order and oral ruling plainly supports
Johnson's assertion that the court's sole reason for denying his motion for attorney fees
upon remand was its belief that the Johnson court's mandate required this result. And
11
given the trial court's written order and oral ruling, it is readily apparent that the court did
not deny Johnson's motion based on his failure to ensure that his attorney fees request
was in the pretrial conference order. In turn, the Board's assertion that Johnson
abandoned his ability to challenge the trial court's denial of his motion is fatally flawed.
Quite clearly, appellants cannot abandon their ability to challenge trial court decisions by
failing to address rulings never made by the court.
The Johnson court's mandate did not bar Johnson from moving for attorney fees
upon remand or postjudgment.
Like the abandonment issue just addressed, whether the trial court properly denied
Johnson's motion for attorney fees upon remand under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 based
on its interpretation of the Johnson court's mandate constitutes a question of law over
which this court exercises unlimited review. See In re Henson, 58 Kan. App. 2d 167, 175,
464 P.3d 963 (2020) (holding that the application of the law of the case doctrine
constitutes a question of law); Nauheim v. City of Topeka, 309 Kan. 145, 149, 432 P.3d
647 (2019) (holding that statutory interpretation constitutes a question of law); Sierra
Club v. Mosier, 305 Kan. 1090, 1105, 391 P.3d 667 (2017) (holding that both the trial
court's compliance with an appellate court's mandate and the interpretation of an
appellate court's mandate constitute questions of law); Rinehart v. Morton Buildings, Inc.,
297 Kan. 926, 942, 305 P.3d 622 (2013) (holding that the trial court's authority to award
attorney fees constitutes a question of law).
Here, K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621(a) controls whether Johnson was entitled to
attorney fees under the Kansas Uniform Common Interest Owners Bill of Rights Act. In
addition to stating that "[a] declarant, association, unit owner, or any other person subject
to this act may bring an action to enforce a right granted or obligation imposed by this
act, the declaration, or the bylaws," this provision states that "[t]he court may award
reasonable attorney's fees and costs." K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621(a). Meanwhile, K.S.A.
12
2020 Supp. 58-4621(c) states that "[t]he remedies provided by this act shall be liberally
administered to the end that the aggrieved party is put in as good a position as if the other
party had fully performed." Yet, nothing within the plain language of K.S.A. 2020 Supp.
58-4621 addresses when parties moving for attorney fees must do so. It is also worth
pointing out that unlike some jurisdictions, Kansas' rules of civil procedure contain no
general rule about when prevailing parties must move for attorney fees. That is to say,
under Kansas' rules of civil procedure, there is no rule requiring parties to move for
attorney fees no later than so many days after the trial court enters judgment in their
favor. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 54(d)(2)(B)(i) (explaining that absent the application
of a more specific statute, parties must move for attorney fees "no later than 14 days after
the entry of judgment").
In Bussman, our Supreme Court considered whether Bussman's posttrial motion
for attorney fees under K.S.A. 40-908—the provision allowing prevailing parties to seek
attorney fees from violators of the Kansas Insurance Code—was timely. Below, the trial
court had ruled that even though the jury had entered its verdict in Bussman's favor,
Bussman was not entitled to attorney fees because her posttrial attorney fees motion was
untimely. Particularly, it ruled that by including no language addressing when parties
must move for attorney fees, the Legislature intended that parties moving for attorney
fees under K.S.A. 40-908 do so before the trial court entered its final judgment. 298 Kan.
at 719. Yet, ultimately, our Supreme Court rejected the trial court's ruling based on
K.S.A. 40-908's plain language. 298 Kan. at 719-22.
In reaching its decision, the Bussman court noted that "Rossi on Attorneys' Fees
state[d] that although the jurisdictions [were] not entirely uniform on [the] timing issue,
'the prevailing rule [was] that an application for attorneys' fees may be made after the
entry of judgment.'" 298 Kan. at 721 (citing 1 Rossi, on Attorneys' Fees § 6:18, p. 6-67
[3d ed. 2013]). Overall, though, our Supreme Court's analysis turned on the well-known
rule that when interpreting statutes, courts must try to ascertain our Legislature's intent
13
through the statute's plain language. 298 Kan. at 725. Relying on this rule, our Supreme
Court held that contrary to the trial court's interpretation of K.S.A. 40-908, the lack of
language in K.S.A. 40-908 addressing when parties must move for attorney fees
supported that there was no fixed deadline when parties must move for attorney fees
under K.S.A. 40-908. 298 Kan. at 721. For this same reason, our Supreme Court rejected
Safeco's argument that Bussman's failure to include her attorney fees request in the trial
court's pretrial conference order barred Bussman from moving for attorney fees posttrial.
298 Kan. at 721-22.
As to Safeco's complaint that Bussman's attorney fees request was not in the
pretrial conference order, the Bussman court first ruled that Bussman's request for costs
within the pretrial conference order constituted a request for attorney fees under the plain
language of K.S.A. 40-908 and Kansas caselaw. 298 Kan. at 720. But after making this
ruling, our Supreme Court explained that the "[m]ost persuasive" reason why Bussman's
posttrial motion for attorney fees was timely was because K.S.A. 40-908's plain language
gave all parties "fair and explicit notice" that prevailing parties were entitled to attorney
fees under the Code. Given this, it concluded that Safeco "should not have required a
pretrial order to understand that, if it lost the lawsuit . . . , it was facing a mandatory
allowance to the plaintiff of reasonable attorney fees." 298 Kan. at 722.
So the Bussman decision stands for the proposition that if an attorney fees statute
lacks a specific deadline requiring prevailing parties to move for attorney fees by a
certain date but still gives all parties notice that prevailing parties are entitled to attorney
fees, then prevailing parties may properly move for attorney fees postjudgment.
Similarly, the Harder decision is factually distinguishable from Johnson's case for
several reasons. The Harder court rejected an argument that failing to include a request
for attorney fees in a pretrial conference order barred the prevailing party from requesting
attorney fees posttrial. In Harder, we explained that even if Foster—the contract
14
violator—sought to "sidestep" his contractual obligation to pay Harder's attorney fees,
Foster could not do this. After noting that Harder included her attorney fees request in her
pretrial questionnaire, we explained that the trial court's inadvertent failure to include
Harder's attorney fees request in the pretrial conference order did not bar Harder from
asking for attorney fees after the jury verdict in her favor. 54 Kan. App. 2d at 460. Also,
the Harder court ruled that under the plain language of Harder and Foster's contract, as
the prevailing party, Harder could move for attorney fees associated with Foster's
posttrial attacks on the jury's verdict. 54 Kan. App. 2d at 454-56.
Returning to our statutory construction discussion, as for the rules on appellate
court mandates, we note that K.S.A. 60-2106(c) states that a Kansas appellate court's
mandate "shall be controlling in the conduct of any further proceedings necessary" before
the trial court. Likewise, K.S.A. 20-108 states that Kansas trial courts must follow the
"command[s]" of a Kansas appellate court's mandate. Citing K.S.A. 60-2106(c)'s and
K.S.A. 20-108's plain language, our Supreme Court has held that trial courts are duty-
bound to follow an appellate court's mandate under the mandate rule. Building Erection
Svcs. Co. v. Walton Construction Co., 312 Kan. 432, 441, 475 P.3d 1231 (2020). In fact,
our Supreme Court has held that under both the mandate rule and the law of the case
doctrine, which prohibits parties from relitigating the same issues within successive
stages of the same lawsuit, "'[i]t is axiomatic that on remand for further proceedings [that]
the trial court must proceed in accordance with the [appellate court's] mandate . . . .'" 312
Kan. at 440; see also Venters v. Sellers, 293 Kan. 87, 99, 261 P.3d 538 (2011) (discussing
the application of the law of the case doctrine). Also, our Supreme Court has explained
that appellate courts may depart from the law of the case doctrine when hearing
successive appeals in exceptional circumstances. Nevertheless, the court has held that
trial courts have no authority to depart from an appellate court's orders under the mandate
rule. Building Erection Svcs. Co., 312 Kan. at 440.
15
Of additional significance, when addressing how to interpret an appellate court's
mandate, in State v. Soto, 310 Kan. 242, 256, 445 P.3d 1161 (2019), our Supreme Court
declared the following:
"The [mandate] rule applies to prevent district court action on remand only when an issue
has already been finally settled by earlier proceedings in a case, including issuance of the
appellate mandate. If a final settlement of an issue has occurred, the district judge is not
free to expand upon or revise that history. The mandate rule does not, however, prevent a
district judge from doing whatever else is necessary to dispose of a case. This means the
district judge must not only do as the mandate directs; he or she must also do what is
needed to settle other outstanding issues that must be decided to complete district court
work on the case. Such issues may have been allocated for decision in the district court in
the first place and then untouched by appellate proceedings."
Also, in Provance v. Shawnee Mission Unified School District No. 512, 235 Kan.
927, 933, 683 P.2d 902 (1984), our Supreme Court explained that when an appellate
court's "decision and mandate is fully determinative of the issues presented in the
proceedings below, they become a part of the judgment in the case without further order
of the trial court." This is because there is no need to remand the case to the trial court
with directions to take a certain action when the appellate court has fully decided the
disputed issues in a case. It is only when an appellate court's "mandate does not fully
determine the issues pending before the trial court that directions are necessary or
appropriate to control the conduct of further proceedings to resolve any remaining
issues." 235 Kan. at 933.
So under Soto and Provance, the mandate rule applies when an appellate court has
not fully decided the issues before it and must therefore include directions to the trial
court about what to do upon remand. That is why an appellate court mandate's silence on
an issue does not constitute a direction. Under Soto and Provance, when an appellate
court's mandate or opinion reverses one issue with directions but includes no directions as
16
to another issue it decided on appeal, the appellate court's lack of directions as to this
other issue simply means that the appellate court has fully decided that other issue on
appeal.
Returning to the parties' conflicting interpretations of the Johnson court's mandate,
we once again note that as established in the preceding section, the trial court's sole
reason for denying Johnson's motion for attorney fees upon remand was its belief that the
Johnson court's mandate required it to do so. To that end, whether the trial court correctly
denied Johnson's motion upon remand turns on whether the trial court correctly
interpreted the Johnson court's mandate. And as addressed earlier, while Johnson argues
that a review of the Johnson opinion and mandate under the applicable law shows that he
could move for attorney fees upon remand because the Johnson court never addressed the
merits of his attorney fees request, the Board counters that the Johnson court addressed
the merits of Johnson's request. Relatedly, the Board never addresses the trial court's
discussion of Harder when denying Johnson's motion. The Board, however, contends
that Johnson's reliance on Bussman is misplaced because its rulings apply only to the
specific attorney fees statute at issue in Bussman's case—K.S.A. 40-908.
But there are multiple problems with the Board's arguments.
For starters, it is important to point out that the actual mandate issued by this
court's clerk after our Supreme Court denied Johnson's petition for review merely stated
that the trial court was "COMMANDED . . . without delay" to execute this court's
"judgment" in Johnson "according to law." In other words, the Johnson court's mandate
commanded the trial court to execute its orders as stated in the Johnson opinion in
accordance with the applicable law, which necessarily included the applicable law on
interpreting appellate court mandates and awarding attorney fees. But our orders within
the Johnson opinion when viewed in light of the applicable law on interpreting appellate
17
court mandates and awarding attorney fees shows that the Johnson court's mandate
included no directions related to the merits of Johnson's attorney fees request.
To review, in Johnson, we ruled that based on the arguments before us, which
included arguments about Johnson's right to appellate attorney fees, Johnson's right to
attorney fees, and the Board's right to attorney fees, "[n]obody [was] [e]ntitled to
[a]ttorney [f]ees." 2019 WL 7207550, at *13-14. Regarding Johnson's argument about
attorney fees specifically, in its current appellee's brief, the Board has correctly pointed
out that the Johnson court had primary and alternative rulings when denying Johnson's
attorney fees request. The primary reason why we denied Johnson's request was because
Johnson, by asking only for attorney fees in his petition, had failed to adequately raise the
issue while before the trial court. Then, this meant that Johnson had effectively asked us
for attorney fees for the first time on appeal contrary to our general rule prohibiting
appellants from raising arguments for the first time on appeal. 2019 WL 7207550, at *14.
On the other hand, in Johnson, the alternative reason why we denied Johnson's
attorney fees request involved Johnson's failure to object when the trial court denied his
summary judgment motion without ever addressing his right to attorney fees. 2019 WL
7207550, at *14. Under this alternative ruling, we determined that "even if [it] assumed
for argument's sake that the issue of Johnson's attorney fees was [raised] before the trial
court," because Johnson never objected to the trial court's failure to rule on his attorney
fees request when denying his summary judgment motion, we were required to "presume
that the trial court found all necessary facts and rulings" to support the denial of Johnson's
request. 2019 WL 7207550, at *14.
The Board contends that the Johnson court's alternative ruling addressed the
merits of Johnson's attorney fees request. But the Board's contention is fundamentally
flawed. It fails to understand that this was an alternative ruling that hinged on the
Johnson court "assum[ing] for argument's sake that the issue of Johnson's [trial court]
18
attorney fees was [properly] before the trial court." (Emphasis added.) 2019 WL
7207550, at *14. The word "assume" means "to take for granted; suppose (something) to
be a fact." Webster's New World College Dictionary 87 (5th ed. 2014). In short, when the
Johnson court made its alternative ruling, it did not undermine its primary reason for
denying Johnson's attorney fees request, that is, that Johnson was raising the issue for the
first time on appeal. Instead, we merely ruled that even if we supposed as true that
Johnson's request was properly before us, we would still reject Johnson's argument for a
different reason. See State v. Carr, 300 Kan. 1, 330, 331 P.3d 544 (2014) (Moritz, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part) (explaining that an "alternative holding is
dicta"), rev'd and remanded on other grounds 577 U.S. 108, 136 S. Ct. 633, 193 L. Ed.
2d 535 (2016).
Indeed, our Supreme Court, in Law v. Law Co. Building Associates, 295 Kan. 551,
Syl. ¶ 1, 289 P.3d 1066 (2012), has held that dicta are not binding: "Dicta in a court
opinion is not binding even on the court itself, because the court should consider the issue
in light of the briefs and arguments of counsel when the question is squarely presented
for decision." On that basis, the Board's reliance on our Johnson opinion's alternative
ruling is misplaced.
Again, our primary reason for denying Johnson's request for attorney fees in
Johnson was based on Johnson making his request for the first time on appeal. So it
follows that our Johnson opinion did not address the merits of Johnson's request for
attorney fees. Plainly, when this court rejects an argument as not properly preserved for
appeal, this court does not reject that argument based on its merits. Instead, in such
instances, this court has rejected the argument because the appellant has failed to follow
the correct procedural rules allowing this court to consider the appellant's argument on
appeal. Also, in State v. Godfrey, 301 Kan. 1041, 1042, 350 P.3d 1068 (2015)—one of
our Supreme Court's principal cases on preservation issues—our Supreme Court
"decline[d] to reach the merits of Godfrey's claim because he ha[d] failed to preserve it
19
for appellate review." Even though the trial court ruled that in Johnson we reached the
merits of Johnson's attorney fees request, this is obviously incorrect.
Then, it also follows that the trial court erred when it adopted the Board's
argument that the law of the case doctrine barred Johnson from moving for attorney fees
upon remand. Again, under the law of the case doctrine, courts should generally not
relitigate or reconsider issues that have been previously decided. Venters, 293 Kan. at 99.
But here, because in Johnson, we never reached the merits of Johnson's attorney fees
request, the law of the case doctrine was inapplicable.
Plus, the trial court's overall interpretation of our Johnson opinion ignored the
basic rules regarding appellate court mandates. As just explained, the only issue that we
addressed in Johnson was whether Johnson had preserved his argument to request
attorney fees on appeal. So when we determined that Johnson had not properly preserved
his argument for appeal, we simply held that we would not reach the merits of Johnson's
argument because he failed to properly preserve the issue. In Johnson, we fully decided
the preservation issue while also not reaching the merits of Johnson's attorney fees
request. To this end, we held that Johnson had not preserved his argument. We did not
include directions as to (1) whether Johnson could move for attorney fees upon remand or
(2) whether Johnson's specific attorney fees request was reasonable. See Provance, 235
Kan. at 933.
Unfortunately, the trial court failed to understand that our Johnson opinion lacked
directions regarding Johnson's attorney fees argument because we had fully decided the
preservation issue against Johnson while also not reaching the merits of his request.
Instead, the trial court interpreted our silence about Johnson's future ability to move for
attorney fees and the reasonableness of his specific request as a direction that Johnson
could not move for attorney fees upon remand. In short, the trial court's interpretation of
our Johnson opinion is inconsistent with our Supreme Court precedent in Soto and
20
Provance establishing that appellate courts only reverse and remand with directions on
issues that have not been fully decided on appeal. Provance, 235 Kan. at 933.
Besides, outside of the trial court's interpretation of our Johnson opinion, the trial
court cited no law to support its denial of Johnson's motion. To the contrary, it merely
noted that it disagreed with Johnson's reliance on Harder as evidence that he could move
for attorney fees postjudgment because it found the Harder decision factually
distinguishable from his case.
The trial court correctly found that Johnson's case was factually distinguishable
from the Harder decision in many ways. The trial court, however, created a problem for
itself when it determined that these factual distinctions should foreclose Johnson's ability
to move for attorney fees upon remand.
For example, the trial court failed to address our Supreme Court's decision in
Bussman in rejecting Johnson's argument for trial court-level attorney fees. Bussman,
however, was one of the main authorities that Johnson relied on when arguing that he
could validly move for attorney fees upon remand and postjudgment. In addition, the trial
court's failure to address the Bussman decision was improper because the Bussman
decision shows that the trial court should have considered the merits of Johnson's motion.
Again, after noting that Rossi on Attorneys' Fees reported that most jurisdictions
allowed postjudgment motions for attorney fees, our Supreme Court held that the plain
language of K.S.A. 40-908 allowed Bussman to move for attorney fees postjudgment.
This was because K.S.A. 40-908's plain language did not include a deadline requiring
prevailing parties to move for attorney fees by a certain date but did include "fair and
explicit notice" that prevailing parties under the Kansas Insurance Code were entitled to
attorney fees. Bussman, 298 Kan. at 721. So under the Bussman holding, when
considering whether a party's postjudgment motion for attorney fees is timely, courts
21
should evaluate the plain language of the disputed attorney fees statute for two things:
(1) whether the disputed attorney fees statute included a deadline requiring the prevailing
party to move for attorney fees no later than a certain date and (2) whether the disputed
attorney fees statute provided all parties fair and explicit notice that the prevailing party
would be entitled to attorney fees. If the statute lacks a deadline requiring prevailing
parties to move for attorney fees by a certain date but includes fair and explicit notice that
prevailing parties are entitled to attorney fees, then parties may move for attorney fees
postjudgment.
Here, the attorney fees statute at issue—K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621, like K.S.A.
40-908—does not include a deadline requiring prevailing parties to move for attorney
fees by a certain date. But K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 is distinguishable from K.S.A. 40-
908 because unlike K.S.A. 40-908, K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 does not state that
prevailing parties "shall" be allowed reasonable attorney fees. Instead, K.S.A. 2020 Supp.
58-4621 simply states that the trial court "may" award prevailing parties attorney fees.
All the same, K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621(a) clearly warns that the trial court "may award
[the prevailing party] reasonable attorney's fees and costs" upon the prevailing party's
motion for attorney fees. K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 fairly and explicitly provides
violators of the Kansas Uniform Common Interest Owners Bill of Rights Act notice that
upon a prevailing party's motion for attorney fees, the trial court may award the
prevailing party attorney fees.
Also, as stressed by Johnson in his appellant's brief, the fact that K.S.A. 2020
Supp. 58-4621(c) directs the trial court to "liberally administer[]" the provision to put
"the aggrieved party . . . in as good a position as if the other party" had not violated the
Kansas Uniform Common Interest Owners Bill of Rights Act constitutes further evidence
that parties may move for attorney fees postjudgment. K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 simply
states that the trial court "may" award the prevailing party reasonable attorney fees.
Under subsection (c), trial courts are directed to liberally administer the Act "to the end
22
that the aggrieved party is put in as good a position as if the other party" had not violated
the Act. This language constitutes a clear warning to Act violators that absent
extraordinary circumstances, the trial court will grant a prevailing party's motion for
reasonable attorney fees. As a result, from the plain language of K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-
4621, Act violators would have fair and explicit notice that except in rare instances, the
trial court would grant the prevailing party's motion for reasonable attorney fees upon the
prevailing party's motion.
To summarize, the plain language of K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 lacks a deadline
requiring prevailing parties to move for attorney fees by a certain date but includes fair
and explicit notice that except in rare instances, the trial court could grant the prevailing
party's motion for reasonable attorney fees upon the prevailing party's motion. The
Board, like Safeco in Bussman, neither needed a prejudgment motion for attorney fees
nor a direct request for attorney fees within the pretrial conference order to understand
that if Johnson won his summary judgment motion, Johnson would be entitled to ask for
attorney fees as the prevailing party. In turn, an interpretation of K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-
4621 under Bussman's precedent shows that nothing prevented Johnson from moving for
attorney fees postjudgment following the case's remand from the Johnson holding.
Finally, the Board argues that Johnson's reliance on Bussman is misplaced because
the Bussman decision hinged on K.S.A. 40-908's plain language stating that attorney fees
were included "as part of the costs." The Board's interpretation of Bussman, however, is
clearly wrong. Again, our Supreme Court ruled that Bussman timely moved for attorney
fees because the pretrial conference order included her request for costs and costs
constituted attorney fees under the plain language of K.S.A. 40-908. Nevertheless, its
decision did not rest on this. 298 Kan. at 720-22. In fact, our Supreme Court overtly held
that the "[m]ost persuasive" reason why Bussman could timely move for attorney fees
postjudgment was "the realization that K.S.A. 40-908 [gave] all concerned fair and
23
explicit notice" that any prevailing party under the Kansas Insurance Code was entitled to
attorney fees. 298 Kan. at 722.
So regardless of the Board's assertion otherwise, our Supreme Court's precedent in
Bussman is not so narrow that it is limited to cases involving attorney fees requests under
K.S.A. 40-908. Instead, as explained in the preceding paragraphs, the Bussman decision
stands for the proposition that prevailing parties may move for attorney fees under an
attorney fees statute postjudgment when that statute lacks a deadline requiring prevailing
parties to move for attorney fees by a certain date but includes fair and explicit notice that
prevailing parties are entitled to attorney fees.
In conclusion, the Board asserts that Johnson abandoned his ability to challenge
the trial court's denial of his motion for attorney fees. The Board's assertion, however,
hinges on its flawed interpretation of the trial court's order as including an alternative
ruling in support of its decision. On that basis, the trial court never made an alternative
ruling, meaning Johnson has preserved his argument that the trial court wrongly denied
his motion upon remand based on its flawed interpretation of our mandate in Johnson.
And a review of the Johnson court's opinion in light of the statutes controlling appellate
court mandates and our Supreme Court's decision in Provance shows that our mandate in
Johnson did not bar the trial court from considering Johnson's motion upon remand.
Likewise, a review of K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621 in light of our Supreme Court's
precedent in Bussman as well as our precedent in Harder establishes that Johnson could
move for attorney fees postjudgment.
And so, nothing barred the trial court from reaching the merits of Johnson's motion
for attorney fees upon remand from Johnson. In sum, we reverse the trial court's denial of
Johnson's motion and remand with directions that the trial court consider and then rule on
the merits of Johnson's motion for attorney fees.
24
Is Johnson entitled to appellate attorney fees?
After we assigned Johnson's case to the summary calendar docket, Johnson timely
moved for appellate attorney fees. See Kansas Supreme Court Rule 7.07(b)(2) (2021
Kan. S. Ct. R. 51) (requiring parties in summary calendar cases to move for attorney fees
on appeal no later than 14 days after their case was assigned to the summary calendar
docket). In his motion for attorney fees on appeal, Johnson stresses that K.S.A. 2020
Supp. 58-4621(a) allows parties who successfully sue violators of the Kansas Uniform
Common Interest Owners Bill of Rights Act to request and receive reasonable attorney
fees. Then, he argues that this court should award him $1,891.50 in attorney fees for his
attorneys' appellate work. Johnson reached this figure using the lodestar method for
calculating attorney fees. But he further asserts that this figure is reasonable under Kansas
Rule of Professional Conduct (KRPC) 1.5 (2021 Kan. S. Ct. R. 327).
Of note, the Board has not responded to Johnson's motion for attorney fees on
appeal. Additionally, because more than seven days have passed since Johnson timely
moved for appellate attorney fees, the Board has abandoned its ability to respond to
Johnson's attorney fees request. See Kansas Supreme Court Rule 5.01(b) (2021 Kan. S.
Ct. R. 31) (stating that a party has seven days to file a response to the opposing party's
appellate motion).
In any case, when a party moves for attorney fees on appeal, Rule 7.07(b) controls
this court's authority to grant the party's motion for attorney fees. Subsection (b)(1)
provides that this court may award a party attorney fees for services that the party's
attorney performed in "a case in which the district court had authority to award attorney
fees." Rule 7.07 (2021 Kan. S. Ct. R. 52). Subsection (b)(2)(A)-(C) further provides that
when a party moves for attorney fees on appeal, that party must attach an affidavit to the
motion specifying "the nature and extent of the services rendered," "the time expended on
the appeal," and "the factors considered in determining the reasonableness of the fee"
25
under KRPC 1.5—the rule governing reasonable attorney fees. Rule 7.07 (2021 Kan. S.
Ct. R. 52). And KRPC 1.5(a) states that
"[t]he factors to be considered in determining the reasonableness of a fee include the
following:
"(1) the time and labor required, the novelty and difficulty of the questions
involved, and the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly;
"(2) the likelihood, if apparent to the client, that the acceptance of the particular
employment will preclude other employment by the lawyer;
"(3) the fee customarily charged in the locality for similar legal services;
"(4) the amount involved and the results obtained;
"(5) the time limitations imposed by the client or by the circumstances;
"(6) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client;
"(7) the experience, reputation, and ability of the lawyer or lawyers performing
the services; and
"(8) whether the fee is fixed or contingent." KRPC 1.5(a) (2021 Kan. S. Ct. R.
327).
Also, under the lodestar method of calculating attorney fees, a court must
determine "the number of hours reasonably expended on the case as well as a reasonable
hourly rate associated with the hours spent" before multiplying these two figures together
to establish the lodestar. Gigot v. Cities Service Oil Co., 241 Kan. 304, 316-17, 737 P.2d
18 (1987). Our Supreme Court has held that generally, Kansas courts do not "use only the
lodestar method to calculate attorney fee awards under state statutes." Snider v. American
Family Mut. Ins. Co., 297 Kan. 157, 170-71, 298 P.3d 1120 (2013). Instead, the two
lodestar factors—time worked and the party's attorney's hourly rate—are just two factors
courts should consider when considering the reasonableness of a party's attorney fees
request. 297 Kan. at 170-71.
As previously mentioned, whether a court has authority to award attorney fees
constitutes a question of law over which this court exercises unlimited review. Rinehart,
26
297 Kan. at 942. Also, as previously discussed, K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 58-4621(a) gave the
trial court the authority to award Johnson attorney fees because he successfully sued the
Board under the Kansas Uniform Common Interest Owners Bill of Rights Act. So we
have statutory authority to award Johnson appellate attorney fees under Rule 7.07(b)(1).
In turn, the remaining issue that we must decide is whether Johnson's specific request for
$1,891.50 in appellate attorney fees is reasonable. When considering such issues, "the
amount of the award is within the sound discretion of the awarding court." Snider, 297
Kan. at 169.
Here, when Johnson moved for appellate attorney fees, he attached (1) the sworn
affidavit of his primary attorney and (2) the invoice from his law firm detailing what he
owed it for the hours his attorneys worked on his current appeal. In a sworn affidavit,
Johnson's primary attorney outlined the hours that he and cocounsel spent working on
Johnson's appeal and their hourly rates. And in the invoice, Johnson essentially
confirmed his primary attorney's sworn affidavit claims. The invoice stated that Johnson's
attorneys worked 12.7 hours on his current appeal at a total cost of $1,855.88. Also, the
invoice explained what specific services Johnson's attorneys did and on what dates. In
short, in moving for appellate attorney fees, Johnson addressed the nature and extent of
the services his appellate attorneys rendered as well as the time his appellate attorneys
expended upon the appeal as required under Rule 7.07(b)(2)(A)-(B).
At this point, it is important to note that there is a small discrepancy between the
amount of appellate attorney fees that Johnson has requested in his motion and the figure
that Johnson's attorneys charged him in his invoice. Johnson has requested $1,891.50 in
appellate attorney fees while his invoice shows that his attorneys charged him $1,855.88
for their appellate work. A quick review of Johnson's motion in comparison with
Johnson's invoice indicates that Johnson's primary attorney simply made an arithmetic
mistake. In Johnson's motion, his primary attorney alleged that he had worked 10.7 hours
on Johnson's current appeal while Johnson's invoice shows that his primary attorney
27
worked just 10 hours on Johnson's current appeal. Then, at most, Johnson would be
limited to $1,855.88 in attorney fees as supported by his invoice.
Notwithstanding this minor discrepancy, Johnson's attorney fees request also
complies with Rule 7.07(b)(2)(C) because through his motion and attachments, he has
addressed each of the KRPC 1.5(a) factors for determining the reasonableness of a party's
attorney fees request. More importantly, in discussing the KRPC 1.5(a) factors, Johnson
establishes the reasonableness of his appellate attorney fees request.
By attaching his invoice to his motion, Johnson addressed how much time and
labor his attorneys performed for his current appeal as required under KRPC 1.5(a)(1). In
his affidavit, Johnson's primary attorney addressed the novelty and difficulty of the issue
involved in Johnson's appeal—another requirement of KRPC 1.5(a)—by conceding that
his current appeal involved a relatively simple issue. And in this affidavit, Johnson's
primary attorney addressed the impact that taking Johnson's case had on obtaining other
clients as required under KRPC 1.5(a)(2); he conceded that Johnson's appeal had minimal
impact in this way. He also addressed what the customary attorney fees were in the
region as required under KRPC 1.5(a)(3) by noting that he and cocounsel charged
Johnson less than what other attorneys in the region would have for similar legal services.
And in doing this, he further addressed the experience, reputation, and ability of himself
and cocounsel as required under KRPC 1.5(a)(7).
Similarly, in his sworn affidavit, Johnson's primary attorney noted that the amount
of money in dispute as meant under KRPC 1.5(a)(4) was limited to the parties' respective
attorney fees requests. He conceded that there were not any unusual time limitations as
meant under KRPC 1.5(a)(5) that entitled him and cocounsel to more attorney fees than
their typical hourly rate. He noted that Johnson had been his firm's client since July 2016
as required under KRPC 1.5(a)(6). And as required under KRPC 1.5(a)(8), he noted that
he and cocounsel charged Johnson at a fixed hourly rate.
28
In summary, through his motion for appellate attorney fees, Johnson addresses all
of the KRPC 1.5(a) factors regarding the reasonableness of his appellate attorney fees
request. Outside of the minor arithmetic mistake that Johnson's primary attorney made in
calculating Johnson's appellate attorney fees request, Johnson's invoice supports his
specific attorney fees request. Hence, because of the evidence before us, we grant
Johnson's appellate attorney fees request in the amount of $1,855.88 as established by his
invoice.
Reversed and remanded with directions that the trial court consider the merits of
Johnson's motion for trial court attorney fees.
29