Stewart v. Department of Health & Welfare

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a decision of the district court which in turn was an appeal from a decision from the Idaho Personnel Commission. The sole issue on appeal to the district court was the authority of the Personnel Commission to award attorney fees to a successful party in an administrative appeal. The district court held that the Personnel Commission had no such authority to award attorney fees. We reverse.

Appellants Stewart and Summers were dismissed from their employment at the Idaho State School and Hospital. They appealed their dismissal, and after hearings before the Idaho Personnel Commission were both reinstated, awarded full back pay, and restoration of all employment benefits. Although it was held in the proceedings before the Personnel Commission that Stewart and Summers should be entitled to attorney fees, but nevertheless the Commission had no authority to award costs or attorney fees.

From that decision of the Personnel Commission no appeal or cross-appeal was taken by the Idaho State School and Hospital. Nevertheless Stewart and Summers appealed solely from the decision of the Personnel Commission denying them costs and attorney fees. The district court affirmed the denial of costs and attorney fees to Stewart and Summers, reasoning that no statutory authority existed for the award of such attorney fees in proceedings before the Personnel Commission.

The record reveals that in the proceedings before the Personnel Commission the hearing officer stated:

In the present cases, I am of the opinion that the action taken by ISSH [Idaho State School and Hospital] in each of the cases was not only without proper cause but also was without a reasonable basis in fact. Accordingly, appellants should be entitled to attorney’s fees under the statute, however, the authority to award attorneys fees and costs appears to rest only with a court.
Even though I feel the Appellants are entitled to attorney’s fees and costs in their appeals I am still of the opinion that I do not have authority to make such an award.

The district court shared the opinion of the Personnel Commission and its hearing officer and denied an award of costs and attorney fees. The trial court examined our decision in Bogner v. State Dept. of Revenue & Taxation, 107 Idaho 854, 693 P.2d 1056 (1984) in reaching his conclusion. We disagree.

Bogner had appealed an adverse ruling of the Tax Commission to the district court. The district court awarded Bogner attorney fees incurred for legal representation at the administrative remedy stage and that action was affirmed on appeal to this Court.

This Court in Bogner stated:

*822Our interpretation of § 12-121 is supported by the recent legislation of I.C. § 12-117:
“Attorney fees, witness fees and expenses awarded in certain instances. —(1) In any administrative or civil judicial proceeding involving as adverse parties a state agency and a person, the court shall award the person reasonable attorney’s fees, witness fees and reasonable expenses, if the court finds in favor of the person and also finds that the state agency acted without a reasonable basis in fact or law.”
We believe the purpose of that statute is two-fold: (1) to serve as a deterrent to groundless or arbitrary agency action; and (2) to provide a remedy for persons who have borne unfair and unjustified financial burdens defending against groundless charges or attempting to correct mistakes agencies should never have made, (citations omitted).

Bogner, 107 Idaho at 858-59, 693 P.2d 1056.

Hence, it is clear, pursuant to Bogner, when the claimant loses at the administrative level, but prevails upon an appeal to the district court, and the district court finds in that person’s favor and finds that the state agency acted without a reasonable basis in law or fact, that attorney fees may be awarded for proceedings at the administrative agency level.

In the instant case the facts are more pointed than in Bogner. Here, Stewart and Summers were not the losers at the administrative tribunal level, but rather they were the winners. Here the administrative tribunal held that the action taken by Idaho State School and Hospital in each case was not only without proper cause, but without a reasonable basis in fact. The administrative tribunal held that while such would justify an award of attorney fees and costs, it was without the authority to so grant.

Thus, we are urged by the Idaho State School and Hospital to take an anomalous position, i.e., that a party who has lost in an administrative proceeding, but who prevails upon appeal to the district court, may receive costs and attorney fees for the proceedings before the administrative tribunal. On the other hand it was urged that a person who has prevailed in proceedings before an administrative tribunal and which tribunal has found that the agency action was “not only without probable cause but was also without a reasonable basis in fact” nevertheless cannot recover attorney fees and costs. Such a result would reward an administrative agency for its intransigence and penalize a litigant who has prevailed at the administrative tribunal level. On the other hand, and ironically, it would reward a litigant who has failed at the administrative tribunal level but succeeded upon appeal to the district court. We view such a result as flying in the face of common sense.

In the instant case the learned district court correctly pointed out in its decision that Bogner does not stand for authority that an agency has jurisdiction to award attorney fees for costs incurred at the administrative level. We agree. Nevertheless, it is clear that Bogner does stand for authority that a district court is authorized to award attorney fees for proceedings incurred at the administrative level prior to the time of the institution of the action before the district court. In Bogner, as pointed out herein, the ultimate prevailing party had lost at the administrative tribunal level. In the instant case Stewart and Summers prevailed before the administrative tribunal.

In the instant case we hold that the Idaho Personnel Commission erred in its conclusion of law in ruling that it has no jurisdiction to award attorney fees to a successful party in an administrative appeal if it finds that the “state agency acted without a reasonable basis in fact or law.” I.C. § 12-117.

It is urged that the precise language of I.C. § 12-117, i.e., in any administrative or civil judicial proceeding involving as adverse parties a state agency and a person, the court shall award the person reasonable attorney fees, witness fees and reasonable expenses, if “the court” finds “in favor of the person and also finds that the *823state agency acted without a reasonable basis in fact or law,” can only be interpreted to authorize “the court” to award such attorney fees. We cannot agree.

Such a. result would be an anomaly. A litigant before an administrative tribunal who is successful against a state agency which had acted without a reasonable basis in fact or law, would be denied attorney fees, while a litigant who is unsuccessful before that administrative tribunal might later be awarded attorney fees for the proceedings before the administrative tribunal upon a reversal by a district court.

We therefore reverse the decision of the district court and remand the cause to the district court with directions that he in turn remand the cause to the Idaho Personnel Commission for the award of reasonable attorney fees, witness fees and reasonable expenses to the petitioners-appellants Stewart and Summers. Costs but no attorney fees on this appeal.

BISTLINE and HUNTLEY, JJ. concur.