FILED
Appellate Case: 20-6043 Document: 010110682269 United States CourtPage:
Date Filed: 05/10/2022 of Appeals
1
Tenth Circuit
May 10, 2022
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Christopher M. Wolpert
Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
WINCO FOODS, LLC, an Idaho
company,
Plaintiff Counterclaim
Defendant - Appellant,
v. Nos. 20-6043 & 20-6108
(D.C. No. 5:18-CV-00175-HE)
CROSSLAND CONSTRUCTION (W.D. Okla.)
COMPANY, INC., a Kansas company,
Defendant Counterclaimant -
Appellee.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
Before HOLMES, BACHARACH, and CARSON, Circuit Judges.
In this appeal, Plaintiff-Appellant WinCo Foods, LLC (“WinCo”)
challenges the district court’s orders for attorney’s fees and bill of costs in favor
of Defendant-Appellee Crossland Construction Company, Inc. (“Crossland”).
Specifically, WinCo challenges the district court’s determination that WinCo was
not also a prevailing party in the underlying dispute, and its consequent denial of
*
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited,
however, for its persuasive value consistent with Federal Rule of Appellate
Procedure 32.1 and 10th Circuit Rule 32.1.
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WinCo’s motions for attorney’s fees and costs. WinCo also contends that the
district court abused its discretion in its award of fees to Crossland because it
should have (1) apportioned Crossland’s fees, so WinCo would pay only fees and
costs associated with Crossland’s fee-bearing claim, and (2) reduced the fees
awarded to Crossland commensurate with Crossland’s limited success at trial.
We conclude that these arguments lack merit. Only one fee-bearing claim
went to the jury, as evidenced by the jury instructions and verdict form, and
Crossland was the sole prevailing party on that claim. Further, the parties’ claims
were so intertwined that it would be impracticable and unnecessary to separate
them and apportion fees. Finally, the district court appropriately exercised its
discretion and considered all relevant factors, including Crossland’s limited
success, in reducing Crossland’s requested fees by twenty percent. Accordingly,
exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm the district court’s
orders for attorney’s fees and bill of costs.
I
A
Crossland was hired by WinCo, a grocery chain, to serve as the general
contractor for the on-site work and construction of a new grocery store located at
353 N.W. 39 th Street in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (the “Property”). WinCo and
Crossland entered into two written contracts (the “Agreements”) that provided the
terms under which Crossland agreed to perform its services.
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Disputes arose between the parties concerning the work performed by
Crossland. WinCo alleged various defects and flaws, including that Crossland
improperly cured concrete; improperly constructed the Property’s storm refuge;
ignored directives of the architect of record; delivered a store with miscellaneous
defects; and failed to timely complete the store by the date specified in the
Agreements. Because of these claimed contractual violations, WinCo withheld a
significant sum of money—$850,450.15—from Crossland that was otherwise
undisputedly due under the Agreements.
B
On February 23, 2018, WinCo filed a complaint against Crossland alleging
breach of contract, and seeking a declaratory judgment that payment was properly
withheld from Crossland as a result of Crossland’s breaches. WinCo sought
damages, liquidated damages, the declaratory judgment, and attorney’s fees and
costs. WinCo amended its original complaint on August 6, 2018, asserting the
same causes of action with certain additional factual allegations. 1
Crossland filed a counterclaim alleging breach of contract, unjust
enrichment, and foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien. As relevant here, Crossland
asserted that it timely and fully completed its contractual obligations, and that
1
The specific contract provisions allegedly breached were not
mentioned in the Complaint or Amended Complaint, but were cited by WinCo in
the Final Pretrial Order.
3
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WinCo failed and refused to pay the money it owed for Crossland’s “labor,
services and materials.” Aplt.’s App., Vol. I, at 33 (Crossland’s Countercl.
Against Winco, filed Aug. 3, 2018).
A jury trial began before the district court on December 5, 2019. WinCo
argued that it was entitled to damages totaling $1,232,891.31 and sought a verdict
in the net amount of $382,441.16—its total claimed damages, minus the
$850,450.15 it had retained. On the other hand, Crossland requested an award of
$630,952.15. Crossland had reduced the amount it was seeking from $961,156.04
(at the commencement of litigation) to $850,450.15 (at the beginning of trial) and
subsequently to $630,952.12 (at the end of trial). See WinCo Foods, LLC v.
Crossland Constr. Co., Inc., No. 18-0175, 2020 WL 1818434, at *2 n.3 (W.D.
Okla. Mar. 3, 2020) (unpublished).
The jury was instructed to resolve the parties’ competing claims, to net out
the monetary damages for the claims, and to determine which party was entitled
to recover additional funds from the other. It was also given a general verdict
form in which it could select only one party, and the corresponding amount that
such party could recover. See Aplt.’s App., Vol. I, at 204 (Verdict Form, filed
Dec. 12, 2019) (instructing the jury to “check one” party, Crossland or WinCo,
and “fix damages in the amount of $ ”).
On December 12, 2019, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Crossland,
concluding it was entitled to damages in the amount of $228,909.33. The record
4
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indicates that the jury initially returned a verdict for WinCo, awarding damages in
the amount of $621,540.82—i.e., the $850,450.15 retained by WinCo, minus the
$228,909.33 the jury ultimately awarded Crossland. See id. (jury verdict form
with a check mark selecting WinCo as the prevailing party scratched out and a
scratched out amount); id., Vol. III, at 22 (Trial Tr., dated Dec. 12, 2019)
(statement by Crossland’s counsel indicating that the scratched out amount in
favor of WinCo had been in the range of “621[,000]”). However, the district
court then instructed the jury to reconsider its award, and “particularly the
instruction that has to do with the netting out process,” because the awarded
amount was “considerably outside the range that anybody had asked for.” Id.,
Vol. III, at 18–20. The jury returned 12 minutes later with its final $228,909.33
verdict for Crossland, apparently having subtracted the $621.540.82 it originally
awarded to WinCo from the $850,450.15 contract balance withheld by WinCo. 2
The district court entered judgment in favor of Crossland on December 17, 2019.
WinCo did not appeal the judgment.
Both parties timely moved for attorney’s fees pursuant to 12 Okla. Stat.
§ 936, which allows “the prevailing party” to collect attorney’s fees in “any civil
action to recover for labor or services rendered.” WinCo also sought attorney’s
fees under 12 Okla. Stat. § 939, which similarly provides for prevailing party
2
It is unclear from the record the jury’s reasons for not awarding
Crossland its full requested amount.
5
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attorney’s fees in breach of express warranty cases. The district court denied
WinCo’s motion for attorney’s fees, but granted in part Crossland’s motion for
attorney’s fees in the amount of $306,018.00—eighty percent of Crossland’s
requested fees. The district court explained that “[t]here was, in substance, only a
single [breach of contract] dispute,” on which Crossland was the sole prevailing
party based on the jury’s verdict. WinCo, 2020 WL 1818434, at *1–2. Further,
the court concluded that, although there was no basis for apportioning fees
because the parties’ competing breach of contract claims were, “in substance,
opposite sides of the same coin,” a twenty percent reduction of Crossland’s
requested lodestar amount was warranted because the amount Crossland recovered
in damages was “significantly less” than the amount it originally sought. Id. at
*2. WinCo timely appealed from the district court’s order regarding attorney’s
fees.
Subsequently, the Clerk of Court denied WinCo’s bill of costs; the denial
included a handwritten note explaining that “[WinCo] is not the prevailing party,”
and cited to the district court’s fee order. Aplt.’s App., Vol. III, at 2 (WinCo Bill
of Costs Denial, filed June 25, 2020). On the other hand, the Clerk of Court
approved Crossland’s bill of costs for $18,782.48. The district court subsequently
denied WinCo’s motion to review and vacate the Clerk of Court’s award of costs,
explaining that WinCo’s bill of costs was properly denied because WinCo was not
the prevailing party in the case. WinCo timely filed its appeal as to costs, and the
6
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Tenth Circuit Clerk of the Court consolidated WinCo’s appeals for fees and costs
on July 20, 2020.
II
A district court’s award of attorney’s fees and costs is reviewed for an
abuse of discretion, but any legal conclusions underlying the award are reviewed
de novo. See Pound v. Airosol Co., Inc., 498 F.3d 1089, 1100–01 (10th Cir.
2007); Marx v. Gen. Revenue Corp., 668 F.3d 1174, 1178 (10th Cir. 2011), aff’d,
568 U.S. 371 (2013). A district court abuses its discretion only if it commits
legal error, relies on clearly erroneous factual findings, or no rational basis exists
in the evidence to support its ruling. See In re Williams Sec. Litig.-WCG
Subclass, 558 F.3d 1144, 1148 (10th Cir. 2009).
“[I]n this circuit, the matter of attorney’s fees in a diversity suit is
substantive and is controlled by state law.” Boyd Rosene and Assocs., Inc. v.
Kansas Mun. Gas Agency, 123 F.3d 1351, 1352 (10th Cir. 1997). Accordingly,
we apply Oklahoma state law.
III
On appeal, WinCo challenges the district court’s denial of its motions for
attorney’s fees and bill of costs. It makes two main arguments for reversal. First,
it contends, the district court erred in failing to recognize WinCo as a co-
prevailing party entitled to attorney’s fees. Second, the district court abused its
discretion in awarding excessive attorney’s fees and costs to Crossland. We
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address each argument in turn, and conclude that the district court’s award of
attorney’s fees and costs was appropriate.
A
We first address WinCo’s argument that the district court erred in failing to
recognize WinCo as a co-prevailing party also entitled to an award of attorney’s
fees and costs. We review the district court’s determination that WinCo was not a
prevailing party for abuse of discretion. See BP Am. Prod. Co. v. Chesapeake
Expl., LLC, 747 F.3d 1253, 1262 (10th Cir. 2014) (“We review the district court’s
determination that a party did or did not prevail for abuse of discretion.”).
WinCo does not dispute the district court’s finding that Crossland prevailed
in the instant action, but contends that, as a matter of Oklahoma law, WinCo is
also a prevailing party and therefore entitled to fees and costs. In advancing its
position, Winco challenges the district court’s finding on two grounds. First,
WinCo argues the district court incorrectly found that the underlying case was
based on competing breach of contract claims, rather than separate breach of
contract and breach of warranty claims. Specifically, WinCo contends that the
litigation claims were at issue under two Oklahoma fee-bearing statutes—12
Okla. Stat. § 936, for recovery of labor and services, and 12 Okla. Stat. § 939, for
breach of warranty. Because it prevailed on the breach of warranty claim, WinCo
asserts, it was entitled to attorney’s fees as a co-prevailing party under Oklahoma
caselaw. Second, WinCo argues that, because the jury substantially reduced the
8
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damages awarded to Crossland from its requested $961,156.04 to $228,909.33,
WinCo was also a co-prevailing party entitled to fees under 12 Okla. Stat. § 936.
Based on these two alleged errors, WinCo argues that we should reverse the
district court’s orders on fees and costs.
12 Okla. Stat. § 936 authorizes the collection of attorney’s fees by the
prevailing party in cases for recovery for labor and services rendered, including
breach of contract cases for nonpayment. See 12 Okla. Stat. § 936 (“In any civil
action to recover for labor or services rendered . . . the prevailing party shall be
allowed a reasonable attorney fee to be set by the court . . . .”). Similarly, 12
Okla. Stat. § 939 authorizes the collection of attorney’s fees by the prevailing
party in breach of warranty cases. See id. § 939 (“In any civil action brought to
recover damages for breach of an express warranty . . . the prevailing party shall
be allowed a reasonable attorney fee to be set by the court . . . .”). Under
Oklahoma law, “the concept of ‘prevailing party’ is result oriented.” Atwood v.
Atwood, 25 P.3d 936, 948 (Okla. Civ. App. 2001). In most cases, only a single
party prevails. However, in cases involving separate claims under multiple fee-
bearing statutes, the Oklahoma Supreme Court has concluded that there may be
more than one prevailing party. See Tomahawk Res., Inc. v. Craven, 130 P.3d 222
(Okla. 2005); Midwest Livestock Sys., Inc. v. Lashley, 967 P.2d 1197 (Okla.
1998).
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As to WinCo’s first argument—that it litigated claims under two fee-
bearing statutes, 12 Okla. Stat. § 936 (recovery for labor and services) and 12
Okla. Stat. § 939 (breach of warranty), and prevailed on the latter—WinCo’s
premise is flawed. Simply put, there was no breach of warranty claim at issue
here to trigger the application of 12 Okla. Stat. § 939. Rather, the parties
presented competing breach of contract claims, under the same contract, which
implicated only 12 Okla. Stat. § 936. Thus, the sole party to receive a favorable
verdict and judgment, Crossland, was entitled to recover under 12 Okla. Stat. §
936.
Indeed, WinCo’s position is fatally belied by the jury instructions and
verdict form in this case. These reflect that the parties’ competing breach of
contract claims—and only those claims—were submitted to the jury. The
instructions provided lengthy and detailed guidance regarding the parties’ breach
of contract claims, for example, instructing the jury as to “Elements of Plaintiff’s
Breach of Contract Claim,” “Elements of Defendant’s [Breach of Contract]
Counterclaim,” “Breach of Contract,” “Substantial Performance,” and to interpret
the “[e]ntire contract” “as a whole.” Aplt.’s App., Vol. I, at 183–87 (Dist. Ct.’s
Instructions to the Jury, filed Dec. 12, 2019). By contrast, no instructions were
provided as to any purported breach of warranty claim. The instructions further
stated, in relevant part:
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SUMMARY OF CLAIMS
This is a breach of contract case arising out of a construction
dispute. . . . WinCo alleges Crossland is not owed anything, and
that Crossland owes WinCo money damages over and above the
amounts it has retained and left unpaid, because any monies that
might otherwise be due to Crossland are more than offset by
damages that Crossland owes to WinCo as a result of Crossland’s
alleged breaches of the contract. Crossland, on the other hand,
contends the amount it is owed under the contract exceeds any
offsets or damages that WinCo might be entitled to recover by
reason of any deficiencies in the performance of the contract.
...
GENERAL MEASURE OF DAMAGES
If you decide for plaintiff WinCo on its claim for breach of
contract, you must then fix the amount of its damages. This is
the amount of money that is needed to put it in as good a position
as it would have been if the contract had not been breached. In
this case, the amount of damages would be the amount of losses
and expenses that WinCo reasonably incurred in order to resolve
the claims arising out of Crossland’s performance or omissions
under the contract. . . .
If you decide for defendant Crossland on its claim for breach
of contract, you must then fix the amount of its damages. This
is the amount of money that is needed to put Crossland in as
good a position as it would have been if the contract had not been
breached. In this case, the amount of damages would be the price
stated in the contract that has not been paid. However, if you
decide defendant Crossland is entitled to recover on its
breach of contract claim based upon substantial
performance, the amount of damages would be the full price
stated in the contract [$850,450.15] that has not already been
paid less the cost of correcting any omissions, deviations or
defects defendant Crossland caused.
Finally, because both parties are claiming breaches by the
other party to the same contract, it will be necessary for you
to resolve those claims and arrive at a final, or net, number which
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accounts for your resolution of the various disputed issues. In
doing so, you should keep in mind that the negotiated contract
price was $10,364,879.70. That amount is undisputed. It is also
undisputed that WinCo has made payments of $9,796,860.98
under the contract, and that $850,450.15 of the contract amount
has been retained by WinCo, subject to resolution of the
outstanding issues. Therefore, in order for you to make an
affirmative award of damages to WinCo in this case, you must
conclude that the amount of WinCo’s damages due to Crossland’s
breaches exceeds the amount of $850,450.15, and any judgment
for WinCo would be only for the excess of those damages over
the contract amount still unpaid. If, on the other hand, you
conclude, after deducting for any damages caused by breaches
shown to have been committed by Crossland, that there is still
money owed to Crossland under the contract, then your verdict
should be for Crossland in that amount.
The verdict form will ask you to determine the party, WinCo
or Crossland, which you conclude is ultimately entitled to
recover additional funds from the other after you have
resolved and netted out the competing claims.
Id. at 173, 192–93 (emphases added). Thus, the jury was asked to return only a
general verdict in favor of one party after netting out the amounts related to the
parties’ competing breach of contract claims. Notably, WinCo had ample
opportunity to object to the jury instructions and request a specific breach of
warranty instruction. It did not do so.
More broadly, the jury instructions and verdict form reflect that “[t]here
was, in substance, only a single dispute (albeit with multiple underlying factual
issues) and a single prevailing party here.” WinCo, 2020 WL 1818434, at *1.
The record reflects that the parties asserted competing claims for money damages
under the same Agreements, based on the same underlying facts. WinCo argued
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that Crossland’s work was deficient and untimely; Crossland claimed that the
same work met all appropriate standards and that any delays were not its fault.
These claims, as the district court observed, were, “in substance, flip sides of the
same issue—did Crossland’s performance meet contract standards or not?” Id. In
this context, WinCo’s attempt to recast its breach of contract claim as a breach of
warranty claim is unavailing.
Nor does it alter our analysis that the Final Pretrial Report made passing
reference to a warranty provision in one of the Agreements. Specifically,
WinCo’s Preliminary Statement “allege[d] that [Crossland] breached the parties’
contract in four [] separate ways”: (1) failing to pay WinCo $5,000 per day for
each day delivery was delayed; (2) failing to build a storm shelter in accordance
with the parties’ specifications and free from defects; (3) failing to wet cure all
concrete flooring in accordance with the contract; and (4) failing to replace a
broken waterline and be on site during the store opening. Aplt.’s App., Vol. I, at
58–59 (Final Pretrial Report, filed Nov. 18, 2019). In support of each purported
breach, WinCo provided, without elaboration or explanation, an inexhaustive list
of citations to “portions of the contract applicable to [each] claim”—one of which
was Section 3.5, a portion of the General Conditions Agreement obligating
Crossland to warrant its work. 3 Id.
3
Specifically, Section 3.5 of the General Conditions Agreement
(continued...)
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But a passing, boilerplate reference to a warranty provision does not
transform this case into one for a breach of warranty. WinCo did not plead a
breach of warranty claim against Crossland, 4 and the Final Pretrial Report, taken
as a whole, unequivocally characterizes the matter as a breach of contract case.
See, e.g., id. at 58 (Winco’s Preliminary Statement of the Final Pretrial Report,
beginning with, “This is a breach of construction contract case.”); see also
Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 14 (noting that “WinCo does not even use the term
‘warranty’ in the Final Pretrial Report”). If WinCo intended to assert a separate
breach of warranty claim, it was required to do so with “specificity and clarity” in
the Final Pretrial Report. Wilson v. Muckala, 303 F.3d 1207, 1215–16 (10th Cir.
2002). Yet it did not do so. Thus, the district court correctly found that Winco’s
3
(...continued)
provides:
The Contractor warrants . . . . that the Work will conform to the
requirements of the Contract Documents and will be free from defects,
except for those inherent in the quality of the Work [that] the Contract
Documents require or permit. Work, materials, or equipment not
conforming to these requirements may be considered defective.
Aplt.’s App., Vol. I, at 233 (Ex. 1 to Winco’s Mot. for Attorney’s Fees, filed Dec.
31, 2019).
4
The Complaint and Amended Complaint present a cause of action for
breach of contract, but they neither explicitly allege breach of warranty nor cite
the warranty provision of the Agreements.
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“belated effort to turn its claim into a warranty claim within the meaning of 12
Okla. Stat. § 939 is unpersuasive.” WinCo, 2020 WL 1818434, at *2 n.2. 5
The Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decisions in Midwest Livestock and
Tomahawk, on which WinCo relies heavily, are entirely consistent with our result
here. They show that two parties can prevail upon different claims, each of which
invokes a different fee-bearing statute—not, as here, a single claim under one fee-
bearing statute where a verdict and judgment are issued in favor of only one
party.
In Midwest Livestock, a dispute arose between a property owner and a
contractor, leading the property owner to withhold payment to the contractor. 967
P.2d at 1198. The contractor stopped working and filed a mechanic’s lien for
$110,304.75, the amount due on the contract; the property owner claimed
$475,000 in damages. Id. Both parties also sought attorney’s fees as the
prevailing party under 12 Okla. Stat. § 936 (contract for labor and services), 12
Okla. Stat. § 939 (breach of express warranty), and 42 Okla. Stat. § 176
5
Even if we were to conclude that WinCo had presented a breach of
warranty claim, however, the record provides no support for WinCo’s assertion
that it prevailed on such a claim. At bottom, WinCo’s theory is that the jury’s
reduction of Crossland’s recovery necessarily reflects WinCo’s success on its
purported breach of warranty claim. But numerous contractual clauses were at
issue in this litigation, and WinCo also sought $715,000 in liquidated damages
from Crossland stemming from the delay. Given the jury’s general verdict, it is
impossible to know whether to attribute the offset to liquidated damages,
Crossland’s breach of a different contractual provision, or, as WinCo speculates,
breach of warranty.
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(mechanic’s lien). Id. An arbitrator awarded the property owner $99,722 on its
claim for breach of contract, defects, and other related matters, and also awarded
the contractor $110,304.75, the full amount of its mechanic’s lien claim. Id. The
arbitrator then awarded the property owner attorney’s fees and denied the
contractor’s claim for attorney’s fees, which the district court and Court of Civil
Appeals affirmed, reasoning that the property owner was ultimately required to
pay less than the amount due on the contract. Id. at 1198–99. The Oklahoma
Supreme Court reversed, concluding that there were two prevailing parties and
that both were entitled to attorney’s fees based on their respective fee-bearing
statutes: the property owner prevailed on the breach of contract claim, and the
contractor prevailed on its mechanic’s lien. See id. at 1199. Accordingly, each
party could recover its attorney’s fees from the other. Id.
Notably, in so holding, the Oklahoma Supreme Court in Midwest Livestock
analogized the case to its previous decision in Welling v. American Roofing Co.,
617 P.2d 206 (Okla. 1980). There, the court considered a dispute between
homeowners and a roofing subcontractor who failed to properly install a roof,
causing rain damage to the homeowners’ property. Id. at 208. The court held that
both parties prevailed in the case and were thus entitled to attorney’s fees: the
homeowners prevailed on the roofer’s mechanic’s lien claim, which was untimely,
entitling them to fees under 42 Okla. Stat. § 176; but the roofer prevailed on a
theory of unjust enrichment which entitled it to fees under 12 Okla. Stat. § 936.
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Id. at 210. Accordingly, the court concluded that “plaintiffs should recover their
attorney fees from defendant, and defendant should recover its attorney fees from
the plaintiffs.” Id.
And, as for the other case on which Winco heavily
relies—Tomahawk—there, a contractor sued homeowners on a residential
construction contract and for foreclosure of its mechanic’s lien, while the
homeowners counterclaimed for, among other things, breach of contract. 130
P.3d at 223. A jury awarded the contractor $47,798.20, the full amount of its
mechanic’s lien, and awarded the homeowners $17,798.20 on their breach of
contract counterclaim. Id. The district court entered judgment reflecting the jury
verdicts for both parties and then, offsetting the award to the contractor against
the award to the homeowner, ordered that the homeowners pay the contractor the
$30,000 difference. Both parties subsequently sought attorney’s fees as
prevailing parties on their claims. Id.
The district judge awarded attorney’s fees and costs to only the contractor,
and the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. Id. The Oklahoma Supreme Court
reversed, finding that both parties had prevailed under the Oklahoma Supreme
Court’s rulings in Welling and Midwest Livestock. Id. at 223–24. The contractor
was entitled to attorney’s fees under Oklahoma’s lien statute, 42 Okla. Stat.
§ 176, for foreclosure of its mechanic’s lien, and the homeowners were entitled to
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attorney’s fees under 12 Okla. Stat. § 936 for their breach of contract
counterclaim. Id. at 224.
Tomahawk and Midwest Livestock involved two discrete, fee-bearing
statutes, and each party prevailed on a separate, fee-bearing claim. By contrast,
only one fee-bearing claim, for labor and services rendered, see 12 Okla. Stat.
§ 936, was at issue here—and Crossland alone prevailed on it.
Finally, to the extent WinCo argues that it also prevailed on its breach of
contract claim and is therefore entitled to fees pursuant to 12 Okla. Stat. § 936, it
is wrong. WinCo repeatedly refers to the supposed $621,540.82 damages award
in its favor, see, e.g., Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 9–10, 16, 23, asking us to conclude
that the jury’s decision to only award to Crossland $228,909.33 of its claimed
damages of $850,450.15 necessarily reflects a $621,540.82 verdict in favor of
WinCo. But a reduction of damages to the prevailing party is not necessarily the
equivalent of the adverse party prevailing on a claim. 6 And because the jury
instructions and verdict form aggregated the issues, we cannot know on which, if
any, issues the jury found for WinCo. See Aplt.’s App., Vol. I, at 193 (“The
verdict form will ask you to determine the party, WinCo or Crossland, which you
conclude is ultimately entitled to recover additional funds from the other after you
6
As Crossland observes, WinCo’s position, taken to its logical
conclusion, would mean that “a party seeking payment for labor or services must
always recover 100% of its contract balance to be the sole ‘prevailing party’
under 12 O.S. §936.” Aplee.’s Resp. Br. at 22.
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have resolved and netted out the competing claims.”). It is not for us to speculate
as to the reasoning behind a general jury verdict. See Union Pac. R. Co. v.
Lumbert, 401 F.2d 699, 701–02 (10th Cir. 1968); cf. Midwest Underground
Storage, Inc. v. Porter, 717 F.2d 493, 501 (10th Cir. 1983) (“It is well settled that
a verdict will not be upset on the basis of speculation as to the manner in which
the jurors arrived at it.”); accord Nanodetex Corp. v. Defiant Techs., 349 F.
App’x 312, 320 (10th Cir. 2009) (unpublished).
In sum, the jury concluded that Crossland was owed money by WinCo for
its unpaid labor and services. Crossland, therefore, was the only prevailing party
under the only fee-bearing statute at issue, 12 Okla. Stat. § 936, based on the
verdict and judgment in its favor for recovery of unpaid labor and services. It is
entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees—and, consequently, costs—and WinCo is
not.
B
We next turn to WinCo’s argument that the district court abused its
discretion in determining the amount of attorney’s fees awarded to Crossland.
WinCo presents two independent reasons to hold that the district court’s fee
award constituted an abuse of discretion. First, WinCo avers that the district
court should have apportioned Crossland’s award between work associated with
Crossland’s admittedly fee recoverable claim for unpaid labor and services, and
work associated with WinCo’s breach of contract claim (i.e., pertaining to
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delivery of non-conforming and late work rather than unpaid labor and services),
which did not fall within the purview of 12 Okla. Stat. § 936 and, accordingly, for
which fees were not recoverable. Second, WinCo argues that the amount of fees
awarded to Crossland should have been further reduced based on Crossland’s
limited success in litigation, as evidenced by the difference between Crossland’s
requested damages and the jury’s ultimate award. We reject both of WinCo’s
arguments, and hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in
determining the amount of fees to which Crossland is entitled.
As to apportionment, under Oklahoma law as a general matter, “[a]n
attorney fee award is recoverable to a prevailing party only for the work
attributable to a claim for which such fees are statutorily recoverable.” Lee v.
Griffith, 990 P.2d 232, 233 (Okla. 1999). Accordingly, courts typically apportion
attorney’s fees between claims for which attorney’s fees are recoverable and those
for which they are not. See Sisney v. Smalley, 690 P.2d 1048, 1052 (Okla. 1984).
However, Oklahoma courts have recognized an exception to the general rule of
apportionment under certain circumstances, “such as when a lawsuit consists of
closely interrelated claims” such that it is impracticable and unnecessary to
completely segregate fee-bearing from non-fee bearing claims. See Silver Creek
Invs., Inc. v. Whitten Const. Mgmt., Inc., 307 P.3d 360, 366 (Okla. Civ. App.
2013).
WinCo is correct that the parties litigated both a fee-bearing claim
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(Crossland’s claim to recover for unpaid labor and services) and a non-fee bearing
claim (WinCo’s breach of contract claim for deficient and untimely work).
Normally, only fees for work attributable to the fee-bearing claim would be
recoverable. See Sisney, 690 P.2d at 1052. Nonetheless, we conclude that the
district court’s decision not to apportion fees was appropriate because, as
discussed supra, WinCo’s claim and Crossland’s counterclaim were opposite
sides of the same coin. They were therefore so interrelated—in both the nature
and amount of work required—so as to make apportionment impracticable and
unnecessary.
The reasoning of our unpublished decision in Arnold Oil Props., L.L.C. v.
Schlumberger Tech. Corp., 508 F. App’x 715 (10th Cir. 2013) (unpublished), is
persuasive in this regard. There, applying Oklahoma law, the court spoke about
the exception to the general rule of apportionment of fees:
While apportionment is the rule, it bears an exception. If a court
finds all of the time devoted to the alleged non-fee bearing claim
(here, [the owner] Arnold Oil’s breach of contract claim) “would
have been necessarily incurred” in connection with a claim that
is fee-bearing (here, [the contractor] Schlumberger’s breach of
contract counterclaim), then apportionment is not required. In
this case, the district court expressly held this exception applies,
finding Arnold Oil’s breach of contract claim and
Schlumberger’s counterclaim to be “direct corollaries of one
another, as reflected in the jury instructions and verdict form
utilized at trial.” We are given no persuasive reason to doubt this
conclusion. . . . As such, apportionment was not necessary.
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Id. at 716–17 (internal citations omitted); see also Parker v. Genson, 406 P.3d
585, 589–90 (Okla. Civ. App. 2017) (applying the exception to apportionment).
This case falls squarely within the circumstances contemplated by the
exception. Crossland’s sole claim was to collect payment for work rendered on
the Project, which it alleged was contractually adequate; and WinCo sought to
avoid payment for that same work, which it alleged was contractually deficient.
Given the nature of the claims, the time that Crossland devoted to defending
against WinCo’s claim would necessarily have been expended in advancing its
demand for the full amount of damages for its counterclaim. It thus reasonably
follows that the apportionment exception applies because the claims were so
intertwined that it would be impracticable and unnecessary to separate them and
apportion fees. See Schlumberger, 508 F. App’x at 717. This conclusion is
further bolstered by review of the jury instructions and verdict form, as discussed
supra: as in Schlumberger, they reflect that the parties’ claims are “direct
corollaries of one another.” Id. (quoting Arnold Oil Props., L.L.C. v.
Schlumberger Tech. Corp., No. 08-1361, 2011 WL 3652560, at *2 (W.D. Okla.
Aug. 19, 2011) (unpublished)). There was therefore no basis for an
apportionment of attorney’s fees.
Furthermore, WinCo contends that Crossland’s fees should have been
further reduced because of Crossland’s limited recovery at trial relative to its
originally requested amount. More specifically, Winco argues, it was error for
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the district court to award Crossland eighty percent of its claimed fees where
Crossland only recovered twenty-three percent of its claimed damages, and the
fees awarded to Crossland exceeded Crossland’s actual recovery by
approximately $80,000. It maintains that “reducing Crossland’s fee award [to]
23% of Crossland’s actual fees—to be consistent with the extent of Crossland’s
recovery—would have been appropriate.” Aplt.’s Opening Br. at 28.
Under Oklahoma law, it is well-settled that “the amount of the recovery,
along with the amount sued for, may and should be taken into account by the trial
judge” in determining an attorney’s fee award. Arkoma Gas Co. v. Otis Eng’g
Corp., 849 P.2d 392, 394 (Okla. 1993); see also Tibbetts v. Sight ‘N Sound
Appliance Ctrs., Inc., 77 P.3d 1042, 1049 (Okla. 2003) (“[W]e have recognized
the importance of the relationship between the amount sued for in a case seeking
only money damages and the results obtained.”). However, determining the
appropriate amount is not a mechanical exercise. “[T]here is no mathematical
formula which can be applied in every situation as to gauging the reasonableness
of a fee when considering the relationship between the amount sued for and the
amount recovered.” Tibbetts, 77 P.3d at 1049. Rather, courts have broad
discretion in reaching an equitable reduction of the lodestar calculation.
That is precisely what happened here. The district court first calculated the
lodestar fee amount as $382.523.50, by multiplying the attorney hours devoted to
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the case times the attorneys’ hourly rates. 7 See WinCo, 2020 WL 1818434, at *2.
It then explained that the lodestar amount may be adjusted based on various
factors, as articulated in State ex rel. Burk v. City of Okla. City, 598 P.2d 659,
661 (Okla. 1979)—including the result obtained by counsel, which it recognized
to be a “substantial factor in determining the reasonableness of any attorneys’ fee
award.” WinCo, 2020 WL 1818434, at *2.
Finally, it observed that Crossland had obtained “significantly less” than
the $961,156.04 in damages that it originally sought, warranting some fee
reduction; 8 but, on the other hand, that Crossland’s limited recovery was offset by
“the amounts above the retainage which WinCo was seeking as damages, and
which Crossland had to defend against,” which rendered “Crossland’s recovery,
as a percentage of the matters in issue, [] more significant than it would have been
if compared only to its affirmative request.” Id. Balancing those considerations,
it reduced the lodestar amount by twenty percent. Id.
7
WinCo does not dispute the lodestar fee amount of $382.523.50 or
the numbers underlying that calculation (i.e., Crossland’s attorneys’ hourly rates
or the amount of time expended).
8
The district court found that, although at trial Crossland dropped the
amount it was seeking from $961,156.04 to $850,450.15 (at the beginning of trial)
and then to $630,952.12 (by the end of trial), “for purposes of evaluating the
results obtained relative to what it sought, Crossland’s initial request for
$961,156.04, the amount ‘in play’ during the period when the various fees were
incurred, appears the appropriate point of reference.” WinCo, 2020 WL 1818434,
at *2 n.3.
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Under these circumstances, there was no abuse of discretion. To the
contrary, the district court’s approach was proper. It expressly considered both
the amount in controversy and the amount recovered, in the context of other case-
specific factors. And the court’s ultimate fee award bears a reasonable
relationship to the amount in controversy and the amount recovered.
WinCo points to an unpublished decision from the Western District of
Oklahoma, Gaedeke Holdings VII Ltd. v. Baker, No. 11-0649, 2019 WL 5850388
(W.D. Okla. Nov. 7, 2019) (unpublished), to support its position that Crossland’s
fees should have been further reduced. Even setting aside the categorically
limited persuasive value of such district court authority, Gaedeke does not
undermine our conclusion. In Gaedeke, the plaintiffs sought damages in the
amount of $1.07 million, but recovered a verdict for only
$40,000—approximately 4% of the requested amount. The court calculated a
lodestar amount of slightly more than $1 million, but awarded only $106,992 in
fees to the plaintiffs. In so doing, the district court explained:
The reason the court awards a fee as low as it does is self-
evident. The Oklahoma cases make it plain that, in the inverse
logic of involuntary fee shifting where the result obtained is a
factor, the losing defendants ought not to be forced to pay a
Cadillac price for a Trabant [i.e., a very simple economy car],
even when, all things considered, they have reason to be quite
pleased with the Trabant.
Id. at *6 (footnote omitted).
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Here, too, the district court expressly took into account the fact that
Crossland’s recovery was “only 23–24% of its affirmative claim.” WinCo, 2020
WL 1818434, at *2 n.4. It also factored in relevant case-specific circumstances:
“given the amounts above the retainage which WinCo was seeking as damages,
and which Crossland had to defend against, Crossland’s recovery, as a percentage
of the matters in issue, was more significant than it would have been if compared
only to its affirmative request.” Id. at *2. And, accordingly, the court determined
that a twenty percent reduction of the lodestar amount was appropriate. While
this is a smaller lodestar reduction than in Gaedeke, we again emphasize that
“there is no mathematical formula which can be applied in every situation as to
gauging the reasonableness of a fee when considering the relationship between
the amount sued for and the amount recovered.” 9 Tibbetts, 77 P.3d at 1049. And
the fees awarded here were reasonable in light of the circumstances.
Lastly, to the extent WinCo argues that the district court abused its
discretion in awarding fees in excess of Crossland’s actual recovery, it is
incorrect. Oklahoma courts routinely award fees that are greater than the amount
recovered by the party—including in Gaedeke, in which the fee-to-judgment ratio
9
More generally, the wide scope of factors that Oklahoma courts are
directed to consider when adjusting lodestar amounts suggests that, typically,
case-to-case comparisons cannot serve as good barometers for discerning an abuse
of discretion. See Burk, 598 P.2d at 661 (discussing factors for courts to consider
in adjusting lodestar amounts).
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was substantially higher than here. See Gaedeke, 2019 WL 5850388, at *5
(concluding that “a fee-to-judgment ratio of 2.67 to 1. . . . is in the reasonable
range”); see also, e.g., Arkoma, 849 P.2d at 393–95 (affirming trial court’s award
of $5,500 in fees under 12 Okla. Stat. § 936 where plaintiff recovered only $100);
Sw. Bell Tel. Co. v. Parker Pest Control, Inc., 737 P.2d 1186, 1188–90 (Okla.
1987) (awarding $3,000 in attorney’s fees on claim that settled for $1,500).
Accordingly, the attorney’s fees and costs awarded to Crossland were
reasonable in light of Crossland’s degree of success.
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s orders for
attorney’s fees and bill of costs.
ENTERED FOR THE COURT
Jerome A. Holmes
Circuit Judge
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