Joseph G. Blackburn Mary Louise Blackburn, Special Administrator of the Estate of Joseph G. Blackburn, Deceased v. Sheryl Goettel-Blanton

898 F.2d 95, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 2946, 1990 WL 19102
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 1990
Docket88-15645
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 898 F.2d 95 (Joseph G. Blackburn Mary Louise Blackburn, Special Administrator of the Estate of Joseph G. Blackburn, Deceased v. Sheryl Goettel-Blanton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Joseph G. Blackburn Mary Louise Blackburn, Special Administrator of the Estate of Joseph G. Blackburn, Deceased v. Sheryl Goettel-Blanton, 898 F.2d 95, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 2946, 1990 WL 19102 (9th Cir. 1990).

Opinion

KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge:

This is a case of litigation run amok. A minor dispute that long ago should have been resolved by the parties without the help of lawyers has been transformed into an attorney-fee-generating machine. While yielding only $6,654 in damages, it has resulted in more than $138,000 in billings for plaintiffs alone. We consider, inter alia, whether Hawaii law permits an attorney’s fees award to exceed the underlying judgment.

Facts

There’s no doubt about it: Sheryl Goettl-Blanton breached a contract. Four years ago, she agreed to buy a condominium for $245,000, signed the appropriate forms and made a small down payment. She even moved in. A month later, she changed her mind and refused to go through with the deal. The would-be sellers, Joseph and Mary Louise Blackburn, sued Blanton under the contract, as was their right. After much procedural wrangling, the case came to trial and the district court awarded the Blackburns damages of $6,654, prejudgment interest of $14,707.14, 1 costs of $14,-262.56 and attorney’s fees of $61,250.

On appeal, Blanton challenges the award of attorney’s fees. 2 She contends that the amount awarded was excessive, and that the district court erred in denying her motions for a more detailed evidentiary hearing and for sanctions. While most of her contentions lack merit, we agree with defendant that the fees award exceeded Hawaii’s statutory ceiling.

Discussion

Hawaii law prohibits awards of attorney’s fees except where authorized by statute, stipulation or agreement. Food Pantry, Ltd. v. Waikiki Bus. Plaza, Inc., 58 Haw. 606, 575 P.2d 869, 878 (1978). Here, the Deposit Receipt, Offer and Acceptance (DROA) signed by the parties stated that “the prevailing party shall be entitled to recover all costs incurred including reasonable attorney fees ” (emphasis added). That agreement is tempered, however, by Hawaii Revised Statutes § 607-17 (1985), which provides, in relevant part, that where a contract "provides for a reasonable attorney’s fee, not more than twenty-five per cent shall be allowed.” Thus, we can affirm the attorney’s fees award of $61,250 only if three require *97 ments are met: (1) the Blackburns were the prevailing party; 3 (2) the amount awarded was reasonable; 4 and (3) the amount does not exceed the statutory twenty-five percent ceiling.

I

Blanton does not dispute that plaintiffs satisfy the first requirement; she focuses her attack on the second — the reasonableness of the award. We review the reasonableness of the district court’s award of fees for abuse of discretion. See Sharp v. Hui Wahine, Inc., 49 Haw. 241, 413 P.2d 242, 245 (1966). The thrust of Blanton’s argument is that this case was so simple— her breach of contract so self-evident — that plaintiffs could not legitimately have amassed attorney’s fees in excess of $133,-000. 5 Although we are strongly tempted by the logic of this argument, we must reject it.

This case presents clearly the dilemma faced by individuals who must seek redress through our legal system for concrete, yet modest, legal claims. Under a breach of contract theory, the plaintiffs were entitled only to the benefit of their bargain. This did not amount to much: When defendant breached the agreement, the condominium was still worth more or less what she had agreed to pay for it; all plaintiffs were entitled to recover, therefore, was the roughly $6000 it cost them to undo some minor physical alterations to the property and to find a new buyer. Yet, as anyone who has dealt with the law knows only too well, a $6000 claim is hardly worth litigating; it often costs more than that to hire a lawyer just to file a complaint. As here, the solution often adopted is to pile on a lot of big-ticket claims.

Thus, plaintiffs sued not only for breach of contract but also for intentional misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, willful and reckless breach, harassment and abuse of process. By the time they were finished, they were asking for more than $1 million, an amount more nearly worth fighting about. Defendant, for her part, further raised the stakes by removing the case to federal court, filing a counterclaim and heaping on every conceivable procedural and substantive defense. What had started out as a small contract squabble had suddenly become a major ease.

Litigation has its own perverse logic and, the ante once having been raised more or less by mutual assent, the parties were locked into a wide-ranging and costly battle. The Blackburns sought extensive (and expensive) discovery as to why defendant had breached the contract. While irrelevant to their underlying contract claim, this discovery was relevant to their tacked-on claim for punitive damages. When defendant resisted, plaintiffs filed repeated motions to compel discovery and for sanctions.

Eventually, plaintiffs prevailed only on their contract claim, recovering approximately $6000 in damages, plus interest. They spent considerably more than that in litigating the case, however, and, given the scope of the claims and counterclaims, the district court concluded that a $61,250 award was reasonable. On this record, we are unable to conclude that the district court abused its discretion in awarding this amount of attorney’s fees. 6

*98 II

Plaintiffs, however, face an even more serious obstacle in recovering attorney’s fees in this litigation, namely the twenty-five percent ceiling of section 607-17. Section 607-17 is a curious statute: it sets out a pithy, seemingly bright-line rule, yet its meaning is unclear. The section establishes a twenty-five percent ceiling on attorney’s fees awards, but fails to identify the figure to which the percentage applies —presumably, either the judgment, the amount sought in the complaint or the value of the contract. The district court used the last of these figures; it awarded the Blackburns fees of $61,250, i.e., twenty-five percent of the $245,000 contract price of the condominium.

We are unable to agree with the district court’s construction of the statute. Our review of Hawaii caselaw leads us to the conclusion that section 607-17 limits an award of fees to twenty-five percent of the judgment. Two cases are particularly instructive: Lennen & Newell, Inc. v. Clark Enters., 51 Haw. 233, 456 P.2d 231 (1969), and Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Cowan, 4 Haw. App. 166, 663 P.2d 634 (1983). In Lennen,

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898 F.2d 95, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 2946, 1990 WL 19102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-g-blackburn-mary-louise-blackburn-special-administrator-of-the-ca9-1990.