Eighteen Mile Ranch, LLC v. Nord Excavating & Paving, Inc.

117 P.3d 130, 141 Idaho 716, 2005 Ida. LEXIS 113
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 2005
Docket30807
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 117 P.3d 130 (Eighteen Mile Ranch, LLC v. Nord Excavating & Paving, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eighteen Mile Ranch, LLC v. Nord Excavating & Paving, Inc., 117 P.3d 130, 141 Idaho 716, 2005 Ida. LEXIS 113 (Idaho 2005).

Opinion

JONES, Justice.

After a jury trial involving a contract dispute, the district court denied Appellants’ request for attorney fees and costs, having concluded that they were not prevailing parties. We reverse the order denying costs and fees and remand the case for determination of an appropriate award.

I.

T.R. Shelby and Emily Shelby (Shelbys) own Eighteen Mile Ranch, located east of Dubois, Idaho. Camas Creek bisects the ranch, so the Shelbys undertook a project aimed at discouraging grazing cattle from moseying near or into the creek. The Shelbys sought the services of Nord Excavating & Paving, Inc. (Nord Excavating or Company), a company owned by Darrin and Reed Nord, to install water lines and cattle troughs and dig trenches for power lines. Nord Excavating agreed to perform the work pursuant to a written contract with the Shelbys. Later, when the project was nearly completed, the Shelbys requested Nord Excavating to plant some trees and bushes along the creek, and Nord Excavating obliged. Sometime thereafter, however, the parties became embroiled in a contract dispute (the details of which are unimportant to this appeal) and, before the project was complete, the Shelbys kicked the Nords off the project and sued Nord Excavating, Darrin Nord, Reed Nord, and Casey Nord, Darrin’s wife and Nord Excavating’s bookkeeper. After the initial answer was filed, the Nords filed an amended answer and Nord Excavating filed a counterclaim seeking about $12,000 in compensation for services provided. The individual Nords were not parties to the counterclaim.

The parties stipulated to dismiss Casey from the suit a few days before trial began. After the close of the Shelbys’ ease, Darrin was dismissed from the suit by way of a motion for directed verdict. Ultimately, the jury found that the Shelbys had not performed the contract and that Nord Excavating had performed. The jury also found that Reed had personally guaranteed the work, but prior to trial the district court had dismissed that claim on statute of frauds grounds. The net result was that Reed was determined to have no liability to the Shelbys. The jury awarded Nord Excavating $1,054.38 on the Company’s counterclaim. The district court entered judgment on the verdict and the Nords and the Company filed a memorandum of costs and attorney fees under I.C. § 12-120. The district court found that neither the Nords nor the Company were prevailing parties and accordingly denied their request. The Nords and Nord Excavating filed a motion to reconsider, only to receive the same result for the same reason. This timely appeal followed.

II.

We address three issues. We consider first whether the Nords and the Company were prevailing parties. Second, we consider whether the Nords and Nord Excavating adequately supported their request for fees. Third, we consider the question of attorney fees on appeal.

A.

We deal first with the prevailing party issue. The Nords and the Company argue that each of them obtained the best result possible and that they are, as a matter of law, prevailing parties. The Shelbys, on the other hand, argue the court’s determination — that the Nords and the Company were not prevailing parties — was well within its discretion. See Idaho R. Civ. P. 54(d)(1)(B); J.R. Simplot Co. v. Chemetics Int’l, Inc., 130 Idaho 255, 939 P.2d 574 (1997). We agree with the Nords.

A determination on prevailing parties is committed to the discretion of the trial court and we review the determination on an *719 abuse of discretion standard. Burns v. Baldwin, 138 Idaho 480, 486-87, 65 P.3d 502, 508-09 (2003). Idaho R. Civ. P. 54(d)(1)(B) guides courts’ inquiries of the prevailing party question. 1 It provides:

In determining which party to an action is a prevailing party and entitled to costs, the trial court shall in its sound discretion consider the final judgment or result of the action in relation to the relief sought by the respective parties. The trial court in its sound discretion may determine that a part to an action prevailed in part and did not prevail in part, and upon so finding may apportion the costs between and among the parties in a fair and equitable manner after considering all of the issues and claims involved in the action and the resultant judgment or judgments obtained.

In its first memorandum decision on fees and costs, the court observed that Casey was dismissed prior to trial, Darrin was dismissed after a motion for directed verdict, and the jury awarded Nord Excavating less than a tenth of the damages it was seeking in its counterclaim. The court did not mention the outcome in Reed’s and Nord Exeavating’s favor as defendants, and wrote that “[tjaking into consideration the claims, counterclaims and damages alleged and recovered by the parties, neither of the ‘parties’ prevailed in this case.” In so ruling, the district court appears to have relied upon the following language it quoted from Chenery v. AgriLines Corp., 106 Idaho 687, 682 P.2d 640 (Ct.App.1984):

Mere dismissal of a claim without trial does not necessarily mean that the party against whom the claim was made is a prevailing party for the purpose of awarding costs and fees.
Where, as here, there are claims, counterclaims and cross-claims, the mere fact that a party is successful in asserting or defeating a single claim does not mandate an award of fees to the prevailing party on that claim. The rule does not require that. It mandates an award of fees only to the party or parties who prevail ‘in the action.’

106 Idaho at 692-93, 682 P.2d at 645-46. The quoted language is correct but the district court misinterpreted it. In determining which party prevailed in an action where there are claims and counterclaims between opposing parties, the court determines who prevailed “in the action.” That is, the prevailing party question is examined and determined from an overall view, not a claim-by-claim analysis.

Viewing its success from an overall standpoint, Nord Excavating was a prevailing party. In ruling it was not, the district court focused too much attention on the Company’s less than tremendous success on its counterclaim and seemingly ignored the fact that the Company avoided all liability as a defendant. The district court improperly undervalued the Company’s successful defense. Avoiding liability is a significant benefit to a defendant. In baseball, it is said that a walk is as good as a hit. The latter, of course, is more exciting. In litigation, avoiding liability is as good for a defendant as winning a money judgment is for a plaintiff. The point is, while a plaintiff with a large money judgment may be more exalted than a defendant who simply walks out of court no worse for the wear, courts must not ignore the value of a successful defense. In this case, logic suggests that a verdict in Nord Exeavating’s favor and a victory on its counterclaim (albeit, a relatively small one), by definition, makes it a prevailing party.

The individual Nords were also prevailing parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P.3d 130, 141 Idaho 716, 2005 Ida. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eighteen-mile-ranch-llc-v-nord-excavating-paving-inc-idaho-2005.