Board of Trustees v. Hillsborough Community College Chapter of the Faculty United Service Ass'n

563 So. 2d 1102, 1990 Fla. App. LEXIS 4652, 1990 WL 98763
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 20, 1990
DocketNo. 89-01486
StatusPublished

This text of 563 So. 2d 1102 (Board of Trustees v. Hillsborough Community College Chapter of the Faculty United Service Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Trustees v. Hillsborough Community College Chapter of the Faculty United Service Ass'n, 563 So. 2d 1102, 1990 Fla. App. LEXIS 4652, 1990 WL 98763 (Fla. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

PARKER, Judge.

The Board of Trustees for Hillsborough Community College (the College) files this administrative appeal from a decision of the Public Employees Relations Commission (the Commission) affirming an award by the hearing officer of attorneys’ fees to the appellee, Hillsborough Community College Chapter of the Faculty United Service Association (FUSA). Because we conclude that in seeking the attorney’s fees FUSA did not comply with the specific requirements of Florida Administrative Code Rule 38D-14.004, we reverse the Commission’s order awarding fees.

This controversy was commenced when FUSA filed an unfair labor-practice charge with the Commission, alleging that the College violated section 447.501(l)(a) and (c), Florida Statutes (1987), by refusing to bar[1103]*1103gain with FUSA over its decision to lengthen the summer school term, refusing to bargain with FUSA over the impact of that decision, and directly bargaining with unit employees. The charge contained no statement indicating that FUSA was seeking attorney’s fees and costs in the action.

The Commission appointed a hearing officer, who directed the parties to file pre-hearing statements to identify, among other things, any and all legal questions to be resolved and any outstanding motions or procedural questions. Both parties filed timely statements, which made no reference to attorney’s fees as an issue to be resolved at the hearing.

The hearing officer conducted an eviden-tiary hearing, and based on the record testimony, he concluded that the College violated the act by refusing to negotiate over the impact of its decision to alter the 1988 summer school term and discussing the new summer school schedule directly with unit employees.. The hearing officer made no recommendation, to award attorney’s fees. FUSA filed exceptions to the hearing officer’s decision, which did not award attorney’s fees, claiming it had asked for those fees in an off-the-record discussion before the hearing commenced. The Commission directed the College to respond to FUSA’s motion, which the College did. The Commission then remanded the case to the hearing officer to determine if FUSA had made an off-the-record verbal request for attorney’s fees; if so, whether that demand was sufficient under Florida Administrative Code Rule 38-D-14.004(l), and whether an award of attorney’s fees and costs was appropriate under the circumstances of this case and rule 38D-14-004(2).

By agreement, the parties filed a joint motion to supplement the record containing the parties’ individual recollections of any off-the-record discussions concerning a request for fees and costs by FUSA. The purpose of this joint motion was to assist the hearing officer in making a factual determination regarding whether FUSA indeed made such an informal fees request as it maintains.

As stated in the motion, FUSA’s counsel recalled that during the hearing, he responded affirmatively when the hearing officer asked if FUSA was seeking attorney’s fees as part of its remedy. FUSA’s counsel had no further specific recollection of a discussion on that issue, and neither the trahscript nor the reporter’s audio tape contains a discussion of the attorney’s fee issue. A representative and witness for FUSA recalled an exchange at the hearing where attorney’s fees were addressed briefly as a matter of routine. Counsel for the College had no recollection of whether an exchange regarding fees did or did not occur at the hearing. He acknowledged, however, that in the settlement discussion immediately preceding the hearing, FUSA made -a specific demand for fees outside the presence of the hearing officer. Co-counsel for the College likewise could not recall a discussion at the hearing concerning fees.

The hearing officer thereafter issued a supplemental recommended order which found that at a prehearing conference immediately prior to the evidentiary hearing, he outlined on a yellow legal pad two legal issues that were to be decided in this case; one of which was “whether FUSA should be awarded fees.” He further found that at some point in the conference he read the issues to the parties, who agreed to those as the issues to be decided and that he confirmed this by placing the word “OK” in the margin of the notes he made. However, the officer did not place any of this discussion on the record. The hearing officer also made a finding that during the course of settlement discussions before the evidentiary hearing, counsel for FUSA proposed that the College pay FUSA a specific attorney’s fee amount as part of a settlement offer.

Based on this recollection, the hearing officer concluded that FUSA’s prehearing, verbal, off-the-record request for attorney’s fees satisfied the requirements of rule 38D-14.004(1) and awarded FUSA attorney's fees and costs. The Commission adopted the findings and analysis of the hearing officer as conclusive and supported [1104]*1104by the competent, substantial evidence. The Commission concluded that the intent of rule 38D-14.004(1) was fulfilled since the hearing officer specifically noted that the parties discussed the attorney’s fees issue during the prehearing conference, thereby placing the parties on notice that fees were at issue. The Commission also concluded that the College was not prevented from introducing evidence on this issue and did not indicate in its pleadings that it would have presented its case differently had the motion been made on the record.

This case is governed by chapter 38D of the Florida Administrative Code. While the Code contemplates oral, as well as, written motions, oral motions must be made during a hearing; otherwise, all motions must be in writing. Fla.Admin. Code Rule 38D-13.006.1 In this case, because the hearing officer found that the oral request for fees was made prior to the hearing, the above rule would require the request to be in writing. A plain reading of the specific rule governing attorney’s fees also appears to require that a motion for attorney’s fees be made in writing. That rule provides:

38D-14.004 Attorney’s Fees, Expert Witness Fees, and Costs of Litigation.
(1) A motion for attorney’s fees, expert witness fees, or costs of litigation in an unfair labor practice proceeding may be filed with the Commission or hearing officer by any party prior to the close of the evidentiary hearing in a Section 120.-57(1), F.S. proceeding_ All evidence supporting or detracting from the claim that attorney’s fees or costs should or should not be awarded shall be presented at the hearing in a Section 120.57(1), F.S. proceeding_ The evidence should address the threshold question of whether fees should be awarded to any party and need not specify the amount of fees claimed.
(2) The Hearing Officer’s Recommended Order shall include a recommendation as to whether fees and costs should be awarded when a timely request for fees or costs has been made.

The language above indicating that a motion for fees may be “filed with the Commission or the hearing officer” presupposes the submission of a written document. See Fla.Admin.Code Rule 38D-13.003(1).2 Therefore, applying either the general rule on motions or the specific rule pertaining to motions for attorney’s fees FUSA was required to submit its request for fees in writing, which admittedly it did not do. Rule 38D-14.004 demands further that the motion for fees be made before the close of the evidentiary hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
563 So. 2d 1102, 1990 Fla. App. LEXIS 4652, 1990 WL 98763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-trustees-v-hillsborough-community-college-chapter-of-the-faculty-fladistctapp-1990.