R & R Excavating Co. v. Olive Tree Homes, Inc.
This text of 660 P.2d 1092 (R & R Excavating Co. v. Olive Tree Homes, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff, a subcontractor, brought this proceeding to foreclose a mechanic’s lien against defendants Lewis, the owners of the liened property, and defendant Olive Tree Homes, Inc., the prime contractor. Each defendant denied the lien claim and asserted separate counterclaims for damages allegedly caused by plaintiffs negligence in performing the work it was to do under its subcontract. The trial court dismissed plaintiffs lien claim and gave each of the defendants a judgment for attorney fees and costs as the prevailing parties on that claim. Separate parts of the same judgment order provided for: judgment for plaintiff against all defendants for $2,093.50, plus interest and costs, apparently for the reasonable value of the work plaintiff performed that remained unpaid; judgment for defendants Lewis against plaintiff for $3,984, plus costs; denial of defendant Olive Tree Homes’ counterclaim; and judgment for costs in favor of Olive Tree Homes.
Because plaintiff did not designate a transcript of the proceedings as part of the record on appeal, we are able to consider only the errors claimed in awarding defendants attorney fees and costs and in not awarding attorney fees to plaintiff.
It is apparent that the trial court, not illogically, broke the proceedings down step-by-step. It first disposed of the lien claim in favor of defendants. Having done so', it then applied ORS 87.060(4) literally in awarding attorney fees and costs to defendants as the prevailing parties in the lien claim. However, since Betz Construction v. Peterson, 47 Or App 333, 614 P2d 1184, rev den 289 Or 677 (1980), we have read ORS 87.0601 as a whole and, because ORS [409]*40987.060(2) authorizes the court to decide all well-pleaded issues in lien foreclosure suits, whether or not the lien is allowed, we have treated the ultimate outcome as determining which of the parties, if any, is entitled to costs and attorney fees.
In Betz, the plaintiff lost on its lien claim, but prevailed on its quantum meruit claim. Because it did not prevail on its lien claim, the plaintiff was not entitled to attorney fees, although it was entitled to costs by virtue of its judgment against the defendants, who contended that they were entitled to attorney fees, because they had prevailed on the lien claim. We held that they were not, because they were not entitled to costs as the prevailing party, a prerequisite in any case to entitlement to attorney fees.
[410]*410In Welch v. Webb, 47 Or App 771, 615 P2d 391 (1980), the plaintiffs’ lien claim was reversed on appeal, but we pointed out that the trial court had made findings as to the reasonable value of the work done by the plaintiffs and that the record was sufficient to permit the trial court to make findings on the defendant’s counterclaim. We remanded the case for the trial court to make findings regarding the extent to which the plaintiffs’ work had benefitted the defendant and the amount, if any, of the defendant’s offsetting damages. As things then stood, we pointed out that neither party was entitled to attorney fees, citing Betz.
The latest case involving this question is King v. Suniga, 54 Or App 267, 634 P2d 812 (1981). There, the plaintiffs failed in their lien claim, so they were not entitled to attorney fees. They prevailed on their quantum meruit claim in an amount in excess of the amount that the defendant had tendered into court, so they were the prevailing parties entitled to costs. We pointed out, albeit in dicta, that if the defendant had tendered an amount sufficient to pay the plaintiffs the amount awarded them, he would have been entitled to costs as the prevailing party and would also have been entitled to attorney fees as part of costs under ORS 87.060(4), because he had prevailed on the lien claim.
Here, plaintiff lost on the lien claim; therefore, it is not entitled to attorney fees, even if it were entitled to costs.2 Defendants Lewis prevailed on the lien claim, and their judgment against plaintiff on their counterclaim exceeds plaintiffs judgment against them. Accordingly, they are the prevailing parties entitled to costs and, because they also prevailed on the lien claim, they are entitled to attorney fees under ORS 87.060(4). Olive Tree Homes is not a prevailing party against plaintiff in the overall proceeding, although it prevailed on the lien claim, and it is not entitled to costs or attorney fees. Because plaintiff obtained a judgment against Olive Tree Homes, it is entitled to costs against that defendant.
[411]*411Affirmed in part; reversed in part; and remanded for entry of a new judgment omitting award of attorney fees and costs to defendant Olive Tree Homes, Inc.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
660 P.2d 1092, 62 Or. App. 406, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-r-excavating-co-v-olive-tree-homes-inc-orctapp-1983.